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UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM 


REPORT ON THE PROGRESS AND CON- 
DITION OF THE U. 8S. NATIONAL 
MUSEUM FOR THE YEAR 
ENDING JUNE 30, 1908 


WASHINGTON 
GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 
1909 


Unitep States Nationa Museum, 
Unpber Direction or THE SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION, 
Washington, D. C., December 2, 1908, 
Sir: I have the honor to submit herewith a report upon the present 
condition of the United States National Museum, and upon the work 
accomplished in its various departments during the fiscal year ending 
June 30, 1908. 
Very respectfully, 
Ricuarp Rarusun, 
Assistant Secretary, in Charge of the National Museum. 


Dr. Cuarurs D. Watcorr, 
Secretary, Smithsonian Institution. 


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CONTENTS. 


Page. 

HELE PEL TR OTa VST 2h 1G) 11s ee en 9 
SIGOMUCmRAn Chol) 22 See eee wien ee cels a2 ed eke Ge bas pwedea enh 9 
Some important matters of the year _:_.........--..------------------- 14 
New building for the National Museum..-........---.------------------ 16 

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Department of Anthropology.......------------ eine ee ess 25 20 
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Deparment Ol GEGligy sccee fase c ete whee shee titinn sees set sees 51 
Distribution and exchange of specimens ..........-.--------------- 55 
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AYIA HOY Se laces SRS oa a ce 56 
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LUGS era cubloy ERG Th RV ey 0s pages Be ey tea ea oS, Nec ne 109 


ILLUSTRATIONS, 


Facing page. 


1. New building for United States National Museum. VPerspective view 
of the building as it will appear when finished; taken from the 
southeast, and showing the south or main front and the east side, 
Hornblower & Marshall, architects. Reproduced from a water color 
drawine. Dy Weil. sbeisenning.. =... 2 ee 

2. New building for United States National Museum. South or main 

front, showing progress of work, July 8, 1908_____________________ 

, New building for United States National Museum. North front, show- 

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PLATE 1. 


1908 


Report of U. S. National Museum, 


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REPORT ON THE PROGRESS AND CONDITION OF 
THE U. S. NATIONAL MUSEUM FOR THE 
YEAR ENDING JUNE 30, 1908. 


3y RIcHARD RATHBUN, 


Assistant Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, in charge of the U. S. National Museum, 


GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS. 
INCEPTION AND HISTORY. 


The inception and history of the National Museum have often been 
discussed in the opening pages of the annual report. Congress, in 
the act of August 10, 1846, founding the Smithsonian Institution, 
recognized that an opportunity was afforded, in carrying out the 
large-minded design of Smithson, to provide for the custody of the 
museum of the nation. To this new establishment was therefore 
intrusted the care of the national collections, a course that time has 
fully justified. 

In the beginning the cost of maintaining the museum side of the 
Institution’s work was wholly paid from the Smithsonian income; 
then for a number of years the Government bore a share, and during 
the past three decades Congress has voted sufficient funds to cover the 
expenses of the Museum, thus furthering one of the primary means 
“for the increase and diffusion of knowledge among men” without 
encroaching upon the resources of the Institution. 

The museum idea was inherent in the establishment of the Smith- 
sonian Institution, which in its turn was based upon a ten years’ dis- 
cussion in Congress and the advice of the most distinguished scientific 
men, educators, and intellectual leaders of the nation of seventy 
years ago. It is interesting to note how broad and comprehensive 
were the views which actuated our lawmakers in determining the 

9 


10 REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


scope of the Museum, a fact especially remarkable when it is recalled 
that at that date no museum of considerable size existed in the 
United States, and the museums of England and of the Continent of 
Europe were still to a large extent without a developed plan, although 
containing many rich collections. 

The Congress which passed the act of foundation enumerated as 
within the scope of the Museum “all objects of art and of foreign 
and curious research and all objects of natural history, plants, and 
geological and mineralogical specimens belonging to the United 
States,” thus stamping the Museum at the very outset as one of the 
widest range and at the same time as the Museum of the United 
States. It was also fully appreciated that additions would. be neces- 
sary to the collections then in existence, and provision was made for 
their increase by the exchange of duplicate specimens, by donations, 
and by other means. 

If the wisdom of Congress in so fully providing for a museum in 
the Smithsonian law challenges attention, the interpretation put 
upon this law by the Board of Regents within less than six months 
from the passage of the act éan not but command admiration. In the 
early part of September, 1846, the Regents took steps toward formu- 
lating a plan of operations. The report of the committee appointed 
for this purpose, submitted in December and January following, 
shows a thorough consideration of the subject in both the spirit and 
the letter of the law. It would seem not out of place to cite here the 
very first pronouncement of the Board with reference to the char- 
acter of the Museum: 

“In obedience to the requirements of the charter,* which leaves 
little discretion in regard to the extent of accommodations to be 
provided, your committee recommend that there be included in the 
building a museum of liberal size, fitted up to receive the collections 
destined for the Institution. 7 

“As important as the cabinets of natural history by the charter 
required to be included in the Museum your committee regard its 
ethnological portion, including all collections that may supply items 
in the physical history of our species and illustrate the manners, 
customs, religions, and progressive advance of the various nations 
of the world; as, for example, collections of skulls, skeletons, por- 
traits, dresses, implements, weapons, idols, antiquities, of the various 
races of man. * * * Tn this connexion your committee recom- 
mend the passage of resolutions asking the cooperation of certain 


@ Since the Institution was not chartered in a legal sense, but established by 
Congress, the use of the word * charter” in this connection would seem to be 
unauthorized. It was not subsequently employed. 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. ake | 


public functionaries and of the public generally in furtherance of 
the above objects. 

“ Your committee are further of opinion that in the Museum, if 
the funds of the Institution permit, might judiciously be included 
various series of models illustrating the progress of some of the most 
useful inventions: such, for example, as the steam engine from its 
earliest and rudest form to its present most improved state; but this 
they propose only so far as it may not encroach on ground already 
covered by the numerous models in the Patent Office. 

“ Specimens of staple materials, of their gradual manufacture, and 
of the finished products of manufactures and the arts may also, your 
committee think, be usefully introduced. This would supply oppor- 
tunity to examine samples of the best manufactured articles our 
country affords, and to judge her gradual progress in arts and manu- 
factures. * * * 

“The gallery of art, your committee think, should include both 
paintings and sculpture, as well as engravings and architectural 
designs; and it is desirable to have in connexion with it one or more 
studios in which young artists might copy without interruption, 
being admitted under such regulations as the board may prescribe. 
Your committee also think that, as the collection of paintings and 
sculpture will probably accumulate slowly, the room destined for a 
gallery of art might properly and usefully meanwhile be occupied 
during the sessions of Congress as an exhibition room for the works 
of artists generally; and the extent and general usefulness of such 
an exhibition might probably be increased if an arrangement could 
be effected with the Academy of Design, the Arts-Union, the Artists’ 
Fund Society, and other associations of similar character, so as to 
concentrate at the metropolis for a certain portion of each winter 
the best results of talent in the fine arts.” 

The important points in this report are, (1) that it was the opinion 
of the Regents that a museum was requisite under the law, Congress 
having left no discretion in the matter; (2) that ethnology and 
anthropology, though not specially named, were yet as important 
subjects as natural history; (3) that the history of the progress of 
useful inventions and the collection of the raw materials and products 
of the manufactures and arts should also be provided for; (4) for the 
gallery of art the committee had models in existence, and they pro- 
posed, pending the gathering of art collections, which would of 
necessity be slow, to provide for loan exhibitions by cooperating with 
art academies and societies. 

In the resolutions which were adopted upon the presentation of 
this report, a museum was mentioned as “ one of the principal modes 


12 REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


of executing the act and trust.”* The work was to go forward as 
the funds permitted, and, as is well known, the maintenance of the 
Museum and the hbrary was long ago assumed by Congress, the 
Institution taking upon itself only so much of the necessary respon- 
sibility for the administration of these and subsequent additions to 
its activities as would weld them into a compact whole, which to- 
gether form a unique and notable agency for the increase and diffusion 
of knowledge, for the direction of research, for cooperation with 
departments of the Government and with universities and scientific 
societies in America, and likewise afford a definite correspondent to 
all scientific institutions and men abroad who seek interchange of 
views or knowledge with men of science in the United States. 

Since that early day no material change has been suggested in the 
general scope of the Government Museum; it has only remained to 
elaborate the details, and the opportunity is now close at hand to 
realize all that the first Board had in view, since ample space will be 
available within another two years. 

The development of the Museum has naturally been greatest in 
those subjects which the conditions of the past sixty years have made 
most. fruitful—the natural history, geology, ethnology, and arche- 
ology of the United States, supplemented by many collections from 
other countries. The opportunities in these directions have been 
mainly brought about through the activities of the scientific and 
economic surveys of the Government, many of which are the direct 
outgrowths of earher explorations, stimulated or directed by the 
Institution. The Centennial Exhibition of 1876 afforded the first 
opportunity for establishing a department of the industrial arts on 
a creditable basis, and of this the fullest advantage was taken, though 
only a part of the collections then obtained could be accommodated 
in the space available. 

The department or gallery of the fine arts had made lttle progress, 
though not from lack of desire or appreciation, until within the past 
two and one-half years, during which its interests have been markedly 
advanced, as elsewhere explained. 

Another subject to which much attention has been paid with grati- 
fying results is American history, illustrated by objects representing 


“Resolved, That it is the intention of the act of Congress establishing the 
Institution, and in accordance with the design of Mr. Smithson, as expressed in 
his will, that one of the principal modes of executing the act and the trust is 
the accumulation of collections of specimens and objects of natural history 
and of elegant art, and the gradual formation of a library of valuable works 
pertaining to all departments of human knowledge, to the end that a copious 
storehouse of materials of science, literature, and art may be provided which 
shall excite and diffuse the love of learning among men, and shall assist the 
original investigations and efforts of those who may devote themselves to the 
pursuit of any branch of knowledge, 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 13 


distinguished personages and important events as well as the domestic 
life of the country from the colonial period to the present day. 

It has been deemed appropriate to present the foregoing brief re- 
view of the scope of the national collections in this connection, since 
the time is near when they may be given an orderly arrangement and 
when the subjects least developed from lack of space may have the 
opportunity for growth. By transferring to the new building, as 
proposed to Congress, the subjects which are best represented, which 
have been as a whole most completely classified and can, therefore, 
be most advantageously exhibited for the benefit of the public, 
namely, ethnology, archeology, natural history, and geology, the pres- 
ent Museum building may be given over to the arts and industries. 
In several branches of this subject the collections are already im- 
portant and extensive, and arrangements are under way for large and 
valuable additions. Certain halls in the Smithsonian building were 
originally planned for the gallery of fine arts, and with a moderate 
expenditure they can be adjusted to suit the requirements of to-day. 

With its collections thus distributed between the three buildings, 
all fireproof and of substantial construction, the National Museum 
may be expected to enter upon an era of renewed prosperity and 
usefulness. 

While it is the primary duty of a museum to preserve the objects 
confided to its care, as it is that of a library to preserve its books and 
manuscripts, yet the importance of public collections rests not upon 
the mere basis of custodianship, nor upon the number of specimens 
assembled and their money value, but upon the use to which they are 
put. Judged by this standard, the National Museum may claim to 
have reached a high state of efficiency. From an educational point of 
view it is of great value to those persons who are so fortunate as to 
reside in Washington or who are able to visit the nation’s capital. In 
its well-designed cases, in which every detail of structure, appoint- 
ments, and color is considered, a selection of representative objects is 
placed upon view to the public, all being carefully labeled individu- 
ally and in groups. The child as well as the adult has been provided 
for, and the kindergarten pupil and the high-school scholar can be 
seen here, supplementing their class-room games or studies. Under 
authority from Congress, the small colleges and higher grades of 
schools and academies throughout the land, especially in places where 
museums do not exist, are also being aided in their educational work 
by sets of duplicate specimens, selected and labeled to meet the needs 
of both teachers and pupils. 

Nor has the elementary or even the higher education been by any 
means the sole gainer from the work of the Museum. To advance 
knowledge, to gradually extend the boundaries of learning, has been 
one of the great tasks to which the Museum, in consonance with the 


14 REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


spirit of the Institution, has set itself from the first. Its staff, though 
chiefly engaged in the duties incident to the care, classification, and 
labeling of collections in order that they may be accessible to the pub- 
lic and to students, has yet in these operations made important dis- 
coveries in every department of the Museum’s activities, which have 
in turn been communicated to other scholars through its numerous 
publications. But the collections have not been held for the study of 
the staff nor for the scientific advancement of those belonging to the 
establishment. Most freely have they been put at the disposal of 
investigators connected with other institutions, and, in fact, without 
the help of many such the record of scientific progress based upon the 
material in the Museum would be greatly curtailed. When it is pos- 
sible to so arrange the investigator comes to Washington; otherwise 
such collections as he needs are sent to him, whether he resides in 
this country or abroad. In this manner practically every prominent 
specialist throughout the world interested in the subjects here well 
represented has had some use of the collections, and thereby the Na- 
tional Museum has come to be recognized as a conspicuous factor in 
the advancement of knowledge wherever civilization has a foothold. 


SOME IMPORTANT MATTERS OF THE YEAR. 


The collections of the Museum were increased to the extent of ap- 
proximately 219,505 specimens, of which 176,263 were biological and 
32,755 geological, while 10487 pertained to the several subjects 
grouped in the Department of Anthropology. 

The most important contributions in ethnology were illustrative 
of the natives of Borneo, the Philippine Islands and Guam, the cliff 
dwellers of northwestern Arizona, the Zuni Indians of New Mexico, 
and the Tahltan Indians of British Columbia. Excavations at the 
Casa Grande ruin, Arizona, yielded an interesting collection of pre- 
Columbian objects, and additional archeological material was received 
from Mexico, Bolivia, Egypt, and India. The division of physical 
anthropology obtained many valuable series of specimens from vari- 
ous sources, and arrangements were made with two of the exploring 
expeditions now making excavations in Egypt to secure some of the 
human remains found in the ancient tombs, this class of objects hav- 
ing hitherto been generally disregarded. A large number of models 
and actual examples of devices, deposited by the Patent Office, form a 
most noteworthy addition in technology. The objects were selected 
with reference to their permanent value and as illustrating the prog- 
ress of invention through a long term of years. ‘They relate to many 
subjects and are being arranged in the public halls. 

An exceptionally interesting loan, which is attracting much atten- 
tion, is the flag which floated over Fort McHenry at the time of its 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 15 


bombardment in 1814, and was made memorable as the “ Star Span- 
gled Banner” by the verses of Francis Scott Key. Among other 
loans were several art collections of metal work, porcelain, lacquer, 
ivory, etc., mainly from the Orient; an addition to the exhibit of 
Jewish religious ceremonial objects; and many pieces of china and 
cut glass used at Mount Vernon during the life of Washington. 

In the Department of Biology, the more important accesssions of 
mammals and birds came from Malaysia, the Philippines, and Costa 
Rica. The Bureau of Fisheries transmitted extensive collections of 
fishes and invertebrates chiefly obtained during the exploration of the 
steamer Albatross in the Pacific Ocean. The final division of the 
greater part of the collection of marine invertebrates obtained during 
the early explorations of the Bureau of Fisheries on the Atlantic 
coast, which had been retained for study at the museum of Yale 
University, resulted in the transfer to Washington of over 73,000 
specimens, representing an extremely large number of species and 
including the types of 355 species. The division of insects received 
about 53,000 specimens, mostly American; and the division of plants 
about 25,000 specimens, principally from North and Central America. 

The geological accessions comprised several of exceptional value, 
especially in paleontology. Of fossil invertebrates there were two 
large described collections, containing many types; the material ob- 
tained in the course of explorations of the Cambrian rocks of British 
Columbia and Idaho by the Secretary of the Institution, and of the 
paleozoic formations of Tennessee and Virginia by the curator of the 
division; and important transfers from the Geological Survey. The 
division of fossil vertebrates received two noteworthy additions, one 
consisting of a large number of rare species from various horizons in 
the United States and South America, the other of the remains of 
several species of mammals collected on the Smithsonian expedition to 
Alaska. The department also received several series of rocks and 
ores, a number of rare minerals, and three meteorites. 

The collections of all classes have been maintained in a good state 
of preservation, though lack of space and of a sufficient number of 
expert assistants has rendered it impossible to systematically classify 
and arrange a large proportion of the material. Much important 
research work was carried on and many valuable contributions to 
knowledge were made public. 

In the exhibition halls, which have long been overcrowded, and in 
which the display of new material in quantity is practically dependent 
upon the withdrawal of older collections, some changes and additions 
were made, the latter mainly at the expense of the passageways and 
the convenience of the public, in order to find room for several at- 
tractive loan collections. In this manner the picture gallery has been 


82065—09——2 


16 REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


utilized to almost its entire capacity in the interest of the superb 
assemblage of laces, embroideries, fans, porcelains, and other kindred 
objects brought together by a number of the ladies of Washington, as 
explained below. The average daily attendance of visitors amounted 
to nearly 1,000, a number which would be greatly increased were it 
possible to extend the hours of opening to Sundays and evenings. 

About 26,000 duplicate specimens were utilized in making exchanges - 
and in supplying material to educational institutions. The publica- 
tions comprised 8 volumes and parts of 2 unfinished volumes, all of 
which, except the annual or administrative report, were descriptive of 
Museum collections. The lbrary, wholly restricted to subjects com- 
ing within the scope of the Museum, received 3,257 books, 4,470 
pamphlets, and 247 parts of volumes, a large proportion of which 
were acquired as gifts or in exchange. Interesting exhibits were made 
at the Jamestown Ter-Centennial Exposition and the International 
Maritime Exposition at Bordeaux, France, both of which were held 
during the summer and early fall of 1907. 


NEW BUILDING FOR THE NATIONAL MUSEUM. 


The progress of the work on the new building for the National 
Museum was greatly hindered, as in previous years, by delays in ob- 
taining the white granite from Vermont within the time limits fixed 
by the contracts. The quarry, the cutters, and the railroads have 
all been at fault in bringing about this unfortunate condition, which 
has retarded the completion of the building for many months, and 
has caused a considerable extra expense. 

At the close of the year the exterior walls, except those inclosing 
the south pavilion and the dome, for which the stone had not been 
received, were finished, and the construction of the roofs was well 
under way. The interior structural walls and piers and the floors 
were also completed in the rough, and many of the metal window 
frames of the first and second stories were in place. Some of the 
latter had likewise been glazed. So much work still remains to be 
done in the interior, however, such as the building of partitions, the 
laying of floors, the plastering, the installation of the heating, ven- 
Ulating, and lighting plants, with their immense ramifications of 
pipes and wires, the completion of the windows, and countless lesser 
details, that the expectation held forth of being able to make some 
use of the building by January, 1909, has had to be abandoned. The 
best that can now be looked for is that the storage and laboratory 
quarters may be practically ready for occupancy toward the end of 
the fiscal year. 

This splendid large building, which covers a greater area than any 
other government structure in Washington except the Capitol, was 


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REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. ney 


authorized by Congress in the sundry civil act for 1904, its limit of 
cost being fixed at $3,500,000. The preliminary plans received the 
approval of a committee of the Board of Regents on January 27 
of that year, but it was not until several months later that the work- 
ing drawings were sufficiently advanced to make the initial contracts. 
The ground was first broken on June 15 by the Secretary of the 
Institution in the midst of an informal gathering. The necessary 
excavations were completed during the summer and the heavy con- 
crete foundations on November 9, 1904. Since then the work would 
have gone on continuously and rapidly but for the delays occasioned 
by the slow delivery of granite, as most other contracts have been 
satisfactorily complied with. About four years, therefore, have 
already been consumed in the building, and to these it now appears 
certain that another will be added. 

The importance of this new building will be appreciated by all who 
have kept in touch with the growth of the National Museum and the 
progress of its activities, as described in these reports from year to 
year. The number of specimens received has been enormous, aver- 
aging nearly a quarter of a million annually, while the value of 
the material thus brought together is beyond calculation. Nature, 
as comprehended in the subjects of zoology, botany, geology, eth- 
nology, and archeology, predominates over art in a very marked 
degree, both in the extent and value of the collections and in the 
progress made in their study, classification, and exhibition. It was 
for the accommodation of these collections, whose diversity and 
importance are elsewhere explained and which illustrate the resources 
and many economic problems primarily of the territory of this coun- 
try, that a new building was most urgently demanded and the one in 
question has been planned. When the transfer has been accomphshed, 
the present Museum building can be wholly given over to the arts 
and industries, for which it was mainly constructed and has been 
partly utilized. 

The new building is located on the Mall directly in front of the 
Smithsonian building, which it faces. It is a massive and dignified 
granite structure, four stories high, with a frontage of 561 feet, a 
depth of 365 feet, and a height of 82 feet. Its shorter axis is in a 
line with the center of Tenth street, through which it may be reached 
from Pennsylvania avenue, distant only three blocks. The principal 
external feature of the building is a large square pavilion at the 
middle of the south side, terminating in four pediments, one on 
each face, at some distance above the main roofs. Inclosed by the 
pavilion is a rotunda 80 feet in diameter, with four massive, orna- 
mental piers to be surmounted by a curved ceiling reaching a height 
of 127 feet 7 inches. The exterior structure of the rotunda will be 


18 REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


carried above the pediments of the pavilion in the shape of a circular 
granite wall, capped by a simple rounded dome with slate covering, 
attaining a height of 162 feet 2 inches above the ground line. The 
south pavilion contains the main entrance, sheltered by a portico sup- 
ported by heavy Corinthian columns, of which there are 6 in the 
cuter row. Below these are the steps and platforms of the approaches 
from the driveway, all to be built of granite. 

Aside from the south pavilion the exterior of the building is prac- 
tically without ornamentation, and the same is true of the interior, 
as explained below. Well-designed lines and proportions have pro- 
duced an air of refinement most pleasing and effective, which any 
added features in the way of embellishment could only serve to 
depreciate. The purpose of the building is evident from the outside. 
The window openings predominate, being everywhere, except in the 
upper story, much wider than the intervening piers. The color 
tone is very light. The granite for the exterior walls has come from 
three sources. A pink or warm gray variety from Milford, Massa- 
chusetts, has been used for the basement; a nearly white stone from 
Mount Airy, North Carolina, for the upper story; and a pure white 
granite from the recently opened quarry at Bethel, Vermont, for the 
two main stories and the south and north pavilions. Such parts of 
the roofs as can be seen from the outside are covered with light 
green slate, the same as will be used for the dome, which harmonizes 
well with the stone work. 

In ground plan the building has a general rectangular outline, 
but fundamentally it consists of three main wings joined to the south 
pavilion in the shape of the letter T. Two series of ranges, placed 
at right angles and connecting with the wings near their outer ends, 
compose the northeastern and northwestern parts of the building, 
and help to inclose two uncovered courts, each of which is 128 feet 
square. The interior width of the wings is 114 feet, of the ranges 
54 feet. In the latter the lighting is entirely from windows, and 
thus one story succeeds another uniformly and without any openings 
through the floors. A different arrangement was necessary for the 
broad wings and has been worked out as follows: The lower story, 
which has been termed the “ basement,” although raised several feet 
above the adjacent street, is wholly covered by the floor of the next 
or main story, and in the middle parts will require artificial hghting. 
This condition, however, will not prevent the utilization of all the 
space in this story. The middle of the eastern wing will be occupied 
by the boilers and machinery, and that of the western by a large 
inclosure for the storage of alcoholic specimens, while that of the 
central wing will be used as an exhibition hall for large objects, 
besides serving as a passageway from the north entrance to the 
auditorium in the south pavilion. The windows will furnish light 


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PLATE 3. 


Report of U. S. National Museur 


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REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 19 


to laboratories, workshops, offices, etc., which are arranged along 
the outer walls and extend through the adjacent ranges. The height 
of the story is about 20 feet. 

The main story, as above intimated, also presents a continuous 
floor space, and in order to completely light it the middle part of 
each wing, to a width of 50 feet, is carried up through the second 
story to a ceiling light underneath a roof skylight. The sides of the 
story to a depth of 32 feet are lighted from the windows, but at the 
outer ends of the wings the distance is somewhat greater. The line 
of demarcation between the two sections is marked by a row of piers, 
which helps to support the second story. This open construction is 
the main feature of the wings, and furnishes three exceptionally 
large halls well adapted to the exhibition of collections for the 
public. By means of screens the lateral sections can be partly cut 
off from the skylighted area, and divided into apartments so as to 
meet the varying requirements of installation without destroying the 
architectural effect of the hall as a whole. The height at the sides 
is about 21 feet, and from the floor to the ceiling light about 52 feet. 
The second story of the main wings, as will be understood from the 
above description, is equivalent in space to only the lateral and end 
sections of the first story. It is separated from the skylighted area 
by walls, pierced at intervals by large doorlike openings, from which 
a view of the main halls may be obtained. Its height is about 20 
feet, and it derives its hght entirely from windows. It will also be 
utilized for public exhibition. The third story corresponds with the 
second in the amount and distribution of floor space. It will, how- 
ever, be entirely divided into rooms for laboratories, for the storage 
of collections, and for the general administrative offices. In the 
attics of the wings some additional space for storage will be obtained. 

The building will be entirely fireproof, and will contain every 
modern convenience that is deemed essential for museum purposes. 
A monumental staircase has been omitted on account of the space it 
would occupy, but there are several stairways at different points, and 
passenger elevators at the two entrances. 


NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART. 


In accordance with the plan proposed the year before, with the 
object of maintaining a proper standard of merit in the acceptance 
of paintings and works of sculpture for the National Gallery of Art, 
a committee of five artists to act in an advisory capacity was desig- 
nated in the spring of 1908. The selection of three members of the 
committee was requested of three leading art associations, the other 
two being named by the Smithsonian Institution. This committee 
held its first meeting at the Institution on April 16, 1908. As then 


20 REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


organized, it is constituted as follows: Mir. Francis D. Millet, presi- 
dent; Mr. Frederick Crowninshield, representing the Fine Arts 
Federation, of which he is the president; Mr. Edwin H. Blashfield, 
representing the National Academy of Design; Mr. Herbert Adams, 
representing the National Sculpture Society, of which he is the 
president; and Mr. William H. Holmes, of the Smithsonian Institu- 
tion, secretary of the committee. 

The failure to secure last winter the means necessary to provide 
suitable quarters for the paintings belonging to the gallery has 
retarded the segregation and arrangement of the collection, which, 
therefore, continues to be exhibited under very adverse conditions, 
not at all likely to attract the attention of those who might other- 
wise gladly contribute to its growth. Some important donations of 
pictures were, however, received. 

Mr. William T. Evans has added to his collection of contemporary 
American artists since the last report paintings by Hugo Ballin, 
George de Forest Brush, F. S. Church, Henry Golden Dearth, 
Charles Melville Dewey, Paul Dougherty, Ben Foster, Childe Has- 
sam, Ernest Lawson, Willard LeRoy Metcalf, Robert Reid, R. M. 
Shurtleff, John H. Twachtman, Henry Oliver Walker, Worthington 
Whittredge, Carleton Wiggins, Irving R. Wiles, and Frederick Bal- 
lard Williams. Among other gifts of paintings were the following: 
“ Crossing the Ferry,” by Adrien Moreau, presented by Mrs. James 
Lowndes in memory of her father, Lucius Tuckerman; and “ Indian 
Summer Day,” by Max Wey], presented by thirty of his Washington 
friends in commemoration of the seventieth anniversary of the artist’s 
birth. Mr. Charles L. Freer has made very extensive additions to his 
large collection of American and oriental art, donated to the Institu- 
tion in 1906, which, it will be recalled, is to remain in the possession 
of Mr. Freer during his life. 

The collection of thirteen historical marine paintings executed by 
the late Edward Moran during the later years of his life has, through 
the courtesy of Mr. Theodore Sutro, of New York, been temporarily 
deposited in the galiery at the Museum building. The several pictures 
are entitled as follows: “The Ocean—The Highway of All Nations; ” 
“Landing of Lief Erickson in the New World in the Year 1001;” 
“The Santa Maria, Nina, and Pinta;” “ The Debarkation of Colum- 
bus;” “ Midnight Mass on the Mississippi, over the Body of Ferdi- 
nand De Soto, 1542;” “ Henry Hudson entering New York Bay, 
September 11th, 1609;” “ Embarkation of the Pilgrims from South- 
ampton, August 5th, 1620;” “ First Recognition of the American 
Flag by a Foreign Government, in the Harbor of Quiberon, France, 
February 13th, 1778:” * Burning of the Frigate Philadelphia in the 
Harbor of Tripoli, February 16th, 1804;” “The Brig Armstrong 
engaging the British Fleet in the Harbor of Fayal, September 26th, 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. Di. 


1814;” “Iron versus Wood—Sinking of the Cumberland by the 
Merrimac in Hampton Roads, Mareh 8th, 1862; “The White 
Squadron’s Farewell Salute to the Body of Captain John Ericsson, 
New York Bay, August 25th, 1890;” * Return of the Conquerors— 
Typifying Our Victory in the late Spanish-American War, Septem- 
ber 29th, 1899.” 

By act of Congress, approved May 22, 1908, the colossal marble 
statue of Washington by Horatio Greenough, completed in 1840 and 
since 1875 occupying a position in front of the main steps of the 
Capitol, was transferred to the custody of the Smithsonian Institu- 
tion. It is intended to place this work in the Smithsonian building 
until a more fitting location for it shall be found, probably in connee- 
tion with the National Gallery of Art. The statue has been greatly 
injured by its long exposure in the open air, but its preservation has 
been urged by artists qualified to pass upon its merits. 


AN IMPORTANT ART MOVEMENT. 


The Centennial Exhibition of 1876 afforded the first opportunity 
for extending the activities of the Museum into the field of the arts 
and crafts. In fact, the extensive collections obtained in that con- 
nection, which influenced the erection of the present Museum build- 
ing, completed in 1881, belonged largely in this category. They con- 
sisted principally of gifts contributed by over thirty different nations 
and many American exhibitors, and while none of the subjects 
represented was covered comprehensively, yet the material as a whole 
formed an excellent nucleus from which to build. Most of the objects 
were placed on exhibition in the beginning, but the greater part was 
subsequently crowded out and sent to storage. Among the subjects 
retained on display were several that lend themselves to artistic 
workmanship of a high order. The exhibits along these lines have 
been added to by donation and purchase, and supplemented by im- 
portant loans, and although they are still relatively small, they 
contain much that is of value and importance. In the graphic arts, 
ceramics, metal work, glass work, and lacquer there is now a partial 
segregation of materials, but some of the finest examples of these 
subjects and illustrations of others are incorporated with the histor- 
ical collections or have been temporarily installed among the exhibits 
in ethnology. That the early efforts toward building up this depart- 
ment were not systematically continued has been mainly due to the 
lack of space, but with the additional room soon to be acquired the 
work will be actively resumed, in the hope that before many years 
creditable progress can be shown in the matter of illustrating the 
materials, processes, and finished products, as well as the history of 
the development, of the various arts and handicrafts. 


22 REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


As the success of this undertaking must depend to a great extent 
on private contributions, it is extremely gratifying to announce that 
during the past vear a movement has been started for the very laud- 
able purpose of stimulating public interest in a direction where 
individual help is especially needed. The field is one belonging 
essentially te woman—the adornment of the church, the home, and 
the person—since its development has been mainly due to her inspira- 
tion and its achievements have resulted largely from her handiwork. 
With boundaries not clearly definable and with a large percentage of 
objects difficult of classification, owing to their composite nature, the 
range of material emploved is so great as to furnish exceptional 
opportunities for the skill of the designer, the sculptor, and the 
painter. 

The matter was first brought to the attention of the Museum by 
Mrs. James W. Pinchot in 1907, with the tender of assistance on the 
part of herself and of several other ladies of Washington, the proposi- 
tion being to assemble a loan collection which, it was expected, would 
lead to permanent contributions as has happened in connection with 
other museums. This offer was heartily accepted, but action was 
deferred until May, 1908, when, at an informal meeting called to 
discuss the question, a committee, with Mrs. Pinchot as chairman, 
was appointed to take charge of the work. Although only a few 
weeks then remained in the fiseal year covered by this report, the 
results accomplished during this time through the active efforts of 
the committee proved not only very satisfactory, but especially note- 
worthy as evincing the interest which the subject had aroused. Un- 
fortunately. there was no clear space available for the exhibition in 
either of the buildings, and it became necessary to make the installa- 
tion along one side and between the screens of the improvised picture 
gallery. This caused much crowding of the cases, of which 20 
were required, but the lighting was found to be excellent. The 
arrangement of the objects was attended to by the ladies of the com- 
mittee and others invited to assist. 

Tnasmuch as the work is being continued during the current year 
and many additions and changes are expected to be made, a detailed 
account of the collection will be reserved for the next report. It may 
be said here, however, that the material brought together before the 
close of the year comprised over 500 pieces, many of them old, rare, 
and costly, and covered a very diversified field of European art craft. 
The manner of its presentation, though not systematic, which would 
have been difficult under the circumstances, has been attractive and 
effective, and there is no doubt that the result has been appreciated by 
the public. The subjects principally represented are laces, embroid- 
eries, fabrics, fans, china, miniatures, enamels, gold and silver ware, 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 238 


jewelry, ivory carving, and bookbinding, besides which there are 
many miscellaneous articles of novel and exquisite workmanship. 
The contributors to the loan collection, numbering 17, were as follows: 
Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt, Miss Lydia Spencer Biddle, Mrs. James S. 
Bowdoin, Miss M. C. Codman, Mrs. Nicholas Fish, Mrs. James S. 
Harlan, Mrs. Elizabeth C. Hobson, Mrs. Julian James, Mrs. Richard 
G. Lay, Mrs. C. A. Oswell, Mrs. James W. Pinchot, Mrs. Charles W. 
Richardson, Mrs. Thomas F. Richardson, Mrs. G. M. Robeson, Mrs. 
EF. W. Schley, Miss Olive Risley Seward, and the Misses Trapier. 

In addition to the above, acknowledgments are especially due to 
Mrs. Whitelaw Reid for the gift of a collar and pair of cuffs of Ve- 
netian point lace of the latter part of the eighteenth century. 


SUMMARY OF THE OPERATIONS OF THE YEAR, 


APPROPRIATIONS. 


The appropriations made by Congress, in the sundry civil act, for 
the maintenance and activities of the National Museum during the 
year covered by this report, namely, from July 1, 1907, to June 30, 
1908, were as follows: 


Preservation of collections___-____-_-_-_-_-_-_- $190, O00 
Furniture and fixtures_________________________________ 20, OOO 
Heating and lighting-—-_-____--..__ =.= - 18, 000 
BUMNCINS sRenal tS = See a ee 15, OOO 
es 0) Xcess ee ee oe ree We ee eee. Ee. 2, 000 
Rent of workshops_____-_-_-_--_-- en = WES 4, 580 
EOS tie) Omer arene eee ee ee eee wl eS 500 
Printing wand binding == 22 = 22) ee ee 33, 000 

ELC) (eel) ee oe wee ON eee ee ., Se= V ah =e Fare: 283, OSO 


There was also appropriated in the same act, approved March 4, 
1907, the sum of $1,250,000 for completing the new building for the 
National Museum, being the balance of the amount, $3,500,000, named 
in the original act authorizing its erection. 

Following are the appropriations for the year ending June 30, 
1909: 


Preservation of collections__---_-_-_-_-_-----_- $190, 000 
Furniture and fixtures_________________________________ 5O, OOO 
Heating and lighting ________________________________-_ 22, 000 
Builgdineere pains es 2 eee ee ee 15, 000 
18Y0Y6) lS aE) a a ee ee re an a ee 2, OOO 
Rent of workshops____________________________________ 4, 580 
OS tHe Cae” ee ee ee ee er Aree 500 
Printing and binding ___________- ee i Se BO a ee 34, 000 

G0 021 ES Re Se Sa Se SP ae ele eee ae 318, OSO 

BUILDINGS. 


An account of the progress made on the new building in course 
of erection for the National Museum has been given on a previous 


page. Of the repairs made on the present buildings some were of 
> OF 


aw 


26 REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


considerable importance, as follows: The old slate roofs over the 
south hall and the southeast and northwest courts of the Museum 
building were replaced with tin roofs of a superior quality, similar to 
those constructed over other parts of the same building during the 
{wo previous years. This work, completed on November 3, 1907, also 
included the substitution of new tin valleys for the old ones on the 
south and east sides of the northwest court and the north and east 
sides of the southeast court. Other exterior repairs consisted in re- 
newing worn-out flashings on the ranges and in repainting the roofs 
built the year before, besides attending to many minor matters per- 
taining to the roofs, walls, and windows. The only roof which now 
remains to be replaced is that over the central rotunda. 

In view of the expenditures in connection with the roofs, but little 
means were available for continuing the isolation of the exhibition 
halls as a measure against the spread of fire, as explained in former 
reports. Some progress, however, was made in this direction. The 
several window openings between the northeast pavilion and the art 
gallery were completely closed with macite, and fireproof doors were 
substituted for the wooden ones, thus placing the latter hall in an 
exceptionally safe condition from this point of view. Macite parti- 
tions were also erected to a limited extent in a number of other places, 
where the requirements seemed most urgent. The western hall and 
adjoining range in the Smithsonian building, the walls of which had 
become much defaced, were partly repainted, 12 of the windows in the 
former were thoroughly repaired, and certain fireproof walls and 
doors were added in the basement, so as to completely shut in the 
alcoholic storage, 

Steam was first raised in the heating boilers on October 10, 1907, 
and was continued with little interruption until the 16th of May 
following. The fuel consumed amounted to S80 tons of coal and 52 
cords of wood. Some changes were made in a part of the conduits 
carrying the electric hghting wires in order to secure better insula- 
tion. This system, which now embraces about 28 miles of wire, with 
about 2,000 lamps, 9 motors, and 160 fans for hot weather, together 
with the call box and fire alarm systems, was maintained in good 
condition. 

At the close of the year there were on hand 2,369 exhibition cases, 
2461 storage cases, and 1,621 pieces of office and other furniture. 
Sixty-six of these were made during the year in the workshops of 
the Museum, 54 were purchased from contractors, and 24 obtained 
from expositions. Storage drawers to the number of 1,212 were also 
acquired. A number of old and worn-out pieces of furniture were 
condemned and sold. The experiments looking to the construction 
of fireproof furniture for the new building, noted in the last report, 
were continued, 


-~I 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. va 
COLLECTIONS. 
DEPARTMENT OF ANTHROPOLOGY. 


The additions to this department were comprised in 317 accessions 
and amounted to 10,487 objects, of which over two-thirds belonged 
in the divisions of ethnology and prehistoric archeology. 

Ethnology.—The ethnological accessions exceeded the average of 
past years in both number and value. The most important one, 
presented by Dr. W. L. Abbott, consisted of about 600 specimens 
gathered in West Borneo, south of the region explored the previous 
year by this generous contributor. While mainly illustrative of the 
basket work of the region, it includes a large series of swords, dag- 
gers, knives, and blowguns, a number of objects of personal adorn- 
ment and others relating to religious beliefs. The Abbott collection 
is rapidly becoming one of the most notable of its kind in the world, 
in view both of its extent and diversity and of the care with which it 
has been assembled and labeled. Several noteworthy collections 
from the Philippine Islands were also received. <A fine series of 
weapons, basketry, costumes, models, etc., was donated by Maj. 
George P. Ahern, U. S. Army, and many costumes, weapons, basketry, 
and domestic utensils from the Igorot and Ilocano of Luzon were 
contributed by Maj. E. A. Mearns, U. S. Army, in continuation of 
his former gifts. Capt. Jesse R. Harris, U. S. Army, presented 54 
objects from the Moros of Mindanao, including household utensils, 
tools, weapons, and musical instruments, and Mr. W. E. Safford, of 
the Department of Agriculture, 42 examples of the weapons with 
which Spain in the eighteenth century armed the natives of Guam 
against attacks by pirates. The latter were made by a native ar- 
morer, descended from Philippine stock. Many stone and_ shell 
implements, pertaining to the extinct Chamorros of Guam, were 
obtained from Mr. L. H. T. Costenoble. Surg. H. C. Curl, U. S. 
Navy, donated a small but excellent collection of Australian weapons 
and cult objects. A large number of oriental weapons, costumes, 
and other objects, obtained by United States Senator Albert J. Bev- 
eridge during his recent travels in the Far East, was secured as a 
loan for exhibition. The collection includes a series of Filipino and 
Moro weapons, Japanese swords, spears, and knives, Chinese hats, 
embroideries, and weapons, among the latter being a jade-handled 
dagger of exquisite form and workmanship. Noteworthy also is 
a huge votive sword of the Tokogawa shoguns, bearing inscriptions 
of Buddhist texts in Chinese and Sanskrit characters. It is nearly 
9 feet long and is constructed with all the skill in art for which the 
Japanese are famous. Another large loan collection of exceptional 
interest consists of several hundred examples of Japanese metal and 


28 REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


other art work, assembled by Gen. Oliver Ellsworth Wood, U. S. 
Army, during a four years’ official residence in Japan, including the 
period of the Russo-Japanese war, as United States military attaché. 
It comprises superb brass vases, lanterns and candlesticks, lacquers, 
bronzes, screens, and wood carvings, a pair of costumed dolls 300 years 
old, and a fine series of over 50 teapots, oil and sake vessels. Special 
mention should be made of a pair of handsome bronze flower vases, 
a gift to the Smithsonian Institution by Mrs. Adeline Lanman. 
These vases, which are of chaste form and inlaid with several differ- 
ent metals, were presented by the Emperor of Japan in 1883 to 
Mr. Charles Lanman, American secretary of the Japanese legation 
at Washington. President Roosevelt added to his numerous contri- 
butions a splendid embroidered Arabian saddle cloth. 

Africa was represented in three accessions. Mr. J. D. McGuire, 
collaborator in the Museum, presented an ancient Kongo war horn 
made of the tusk of an elephant. The Leipzig Museum of Ethnology 
sent in exchange 231 weapons, fetiches, implements, and costumes 
from the German possessions, and Miss Louisiana Durant donated 
59 objects from the Kaflir tribes of South Africa, a people which has 
been but poorly represented in the National Museum. 

From the Museum of the Brooklyn Institute about 350 objects 
from cliff dwellings in the Canyon de Chelly and Canyon del Muerto, 
northwestern Arizona, were obtained in exchange. This collection, 
consisting of sandals, cotton cloth, basketry, matting, and other tex- 
tiles, wooden implements, stone axes, mauls, grinding stones, ete., 
which had been preserved in the dust of the dwellings, is the largest 
which the Museum has received from the region of the northern cliff 
dwellers, and will prove of great value for comparison with the 
material secured by the Museum-Gates expeditions in the southerim 
cliff-dwelling district. Mrs. Matilda Coxe Stevenson, of the Bureau 
of American Ethnology, procured illustrations of the arts and in- 
dustries of the Taos Indians of New Mexico, and interesting speci- 
mens relating to the textile industry of the Zuni Indians of the same 
territory. Mr. George G. Heye, of New York, transmitted, in ex- 
change, 88 objects from the Iroquois tribes of New York and Canada, 
comprising masks, rattles, and other ceremonial objects, leggings, 
‘raps, brooches, mortars, pestles, bows and arrows, musical instru- 
ments, coins, and a fine wampum belt. <A collection of 13. silver 
brooches, many of which were heirlooms, from the New York reser- 
vations of the same tribe, was purchased. Mr. J. D. McGuire con- 
tributed a sash of colored wool yarns interwoven with bead work, a 
production of the Creek Indians, probably 100 years old. 

A series of 212 objects illustrating the industrial and social life of 
the little-known Tahltan Indians, of the Stikine River, British Co- 
lumbia, gathered by Lieut. G. T. Emmons, U. 8. Navy, was received 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 29 


through the Bureau of American Ethnology. A small but interest- 
ing collection from Mr. A. Bienkowski, of Panama, consists of masks 
and clothing worn in the ceremonial of Diabolitos practiced by 
the Veragua Indians. Five Indian paintings, executed by J. M. 
Stanley in the early part of the last century and formerly belonging 
to Prof. Joseph Henry, were presented by the Misses Henry. <A 
number of laces, embroideries, and linens made prior to 1830 and 
handed down from the Plimpton family, were presented by Miss 
Mary Noyes. 

Among the models of inventions transferred from the Patent Office 
were many relating to fire making, heating, cooking, illumination, 
culture history, ete., which were temporarily assigned to this division. 

The ethnological groups and objects exhibited at the Jamestown 
and Bordeaux expositions were returned during the winter and spring. 
The routine work of caring for the collections went forward as in 
previous years. Many objects of metal were found to require special 
treatment for the removal of rust and the preservation of the surface, 
and it is now possible to say that the methods initiated a year ago to 
prevent the deterioration of ancient Pueblo pottery have proved bene- 
ficial. The group cases in the Catlin, Pueblo, and Eskimo exhibition 
halls were somewhat changed and rearranged, and the collection of 
jade implements and throwing sticks was installed in the Eskimo 
hall. The laces from Miss Mary Noyes, the Hindu objects sent by 
the Rajah of Tagore, and the collections of Mrs. A. C. Barney, 
Senator Beveridge, General Wood, and Major Ahern, were placed on 
exhibition in the west hall and gallery. The General Wood collec- 
tion occupies four cases in the middle aisle and is one of the most 
important received in recent years. The Abbott cases, in the gallery 
of the west hall, were reinstalled and a complete arrangement made 
of the Kensington cases, three of the latter being filled with art ob- 
jects from the Abbott-Dyak collection. The remainder of the Philip- 
pine collections was provided for in the gallery of the Pueblo court. 

The head curator of the department, Prof. O. T. Mason, made a 
detailed study of the Abbott collection of basket work from southern 
Malaysia, in order to settle upon a definite nomenclature for the entire 
Malay region, including the Philippine Islands. There seems to be 
no limit to basket work in a region where so many adaptable species 
of bamboos, rattans, palms, and useful hard woods occur. The shapes, 
structural parts, and technic, while having some features in common 
with the basket work of America, are mostly of the region. One type 
called the “ mad weave,” anyam gila, made of three sets of Pandanus 
stripes, forming rhombs, was minutely worked out. The demands 
for a carefully prepared vocabulary are the more imperative, since 
the great popularity of arts and crafts studies is bringing into use 
terms not hitherto known to basket makers either in England or 


30 REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. ; 


America; and as much will be written about this industry in the near 
future it is very important for authors to reach an agreement in this 
particular, To give each specimen its full value, the describer 
should furnish its native name and that of the tribe using it, the 
location, and the materials. The spelling of the words should be 
uniform and of good usage, so that the least possible confusion will 
arise. These subjects are discussed in a manuscript by Professor 
Mason, entitled: “ Vocabulary of Malaysian Basket Work,” which 
has recently been sent to press. Another completed study by the same 
author on the Abbott collections embraces the trap series, using the 
term in its broadest sense. 

The results of a special research by Dr. Walter Hough, assistant 
curator of ethnology, on the material in the Museum relating to the 
pulque industry of Mexico were published in the Proceedings. Doc- 
tor Hough also began a study of the blowguns collected by Doctor 
Abbott in Malaysia, and of the comparative status of blowguns in 
other regions. 

Information on ethnological subjects was furnished to many appli- 
cants, and a number of persons visited the division for the purpose 
of studying its collections or its methods of work and installation. 
Data relative to Indian costumes were supplied to several artists, 
including Mr. Francis D. Millet, Mr. William Ordway Partridge, 
Mr. H. K. Bush-Brown, Mr. Francis P. Wightman, and Mr. E. V. 
Valentine. Miss M. EK. Adams, of Pasadena, California, and Miss 
Mary Lois Kissell, of the American Museum of Natural History, 
worked on the basketry collection. Miss Candace Thurber, of New 
York, examined specimens of Indian quill work and embroidery with 
reference to technical processes and designs, and Miss M. Kunckell, 
of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, stndied the methods of arranging and 
labeling Indian photographs, paintings, and plates. Myr. TH. J. Spin- 
den, of the Peabody Museum of Harvard University, made use of 
the material relating to the Nez Percé Indians, on which he is pre- 
paring a memoir for the American Anthropological Association. 
Prof. Emil Goeldi, of Bern, Switzerland, obtained information on 
the technic of horn, antler, and bone work among the American 
Indians, and Mr. George K. Holmes, of the Department of Agricul- 
ture, material for an article on Indian agriculture in this country 
before the advent of the whites. Dr. N. Gordon Munro, of Yoko- 
hama, an authority on the archeology of Japan, examined the col- 
lections from ancient Japanese sites. Mr. Joseph G. Kent, of the 
Land Office, was instructed as to the collection of data relative to 
the ancient ruins of the Hopi Indian Reservation in Arizona. Mr. 
Joseph B. THingeley, of Minneapolis, made inquiries regarding the 
medicine charts of the Ojibwa, of which he has translated several, 
and he has now in course of preparation an article embodying the 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 31 


Indian conception of their genealogy and migrations. Mr. E. H. 
Hammond, of the Bureau of Education of Manila, examined the 
Philippine collection and furnished a large amount of data as to the 
materials and tribal origin of Philippine basketry. Dr. C. V. Hart- 
man, of the Carnegie Museum, Pittsburg, studied the installation 
and especially the arrangement of the synoptic series, with a view 
to introducing this feature in the new Technical Museum in Pitts- 
burg. Dr. George B. Gordon, of the Free Museum of Science and 
Art, Philadelphia, examined the Eskimo collection for material to 
incorporate in a report of recent explorations among these people. 
Information respecting the forms and materials of the Apache and 
Navaho Indian arrows, necessitating an interesting study, was fur- 
nished by request to the Department of Justice. 

In January the head curator lectured before the students of the 
Naval Medical School on the history of culture, with the special 
object of showing how, as medical officers, they might render im- 
portant service to the National Museum. Later he addressed the 
arts and crafts department of the George Washington University 
on the basket work of the Malaysian area. 

Prehistoric archeology.—The additions to this division comprised 
several of exceptional importance. The Bureau of American Eth- 
nology transmitted nearly 800 archeological specimens, being part of 
the results of joint explorations by the bureau and the Department 
of Archeology and Paleontology of the University of Pennsylvania 
at Key Marco, Florida, in 1896, under the direction of Mr. Frank 
Hamilton Cushing. The collection is of great scientific importance, 
representing a people and a culture of which no knowledge had 
previously been obtained. The series of objects is more complete 
and more valuable than any similar one obtained from a single lo- 
eality or number of closely related sites north of Mexico, and throws 
much new light on the state of culture, the manner of life, and the 
industrial and artistic achievements of the Gulf coast tribes of pre- 
Columbian times. The entire collection was kept together until 1900, 
when it was separated into two nearly equal parts, one passing into 
the possession of the Bureau of Ethnology. A soapstone pot from 
Mecklenburg County, Virginia, and two grooved axes of clay iron- 
stone and a rubbing hammer stone obtained by Mr. Thomas J. Wilson 
near Hughes Springs, Cass County, Texas, were also received from 
the same bureau. 

Among the gifts were a silver image from ruins on an island in 
Lake Titicaca, Bolivia, in the well-known style of the Titicacan 
region, presented by Dr. T. S. K. Morton, of Philadelphia; and a 
series of flint implements from the Fayum desert, Egypt, and one 
of paleolithic quartzite implements, together with two stone hatchets, 
from the Pennaar River Valley, India, contributed by Mr. H. W. 

§2065—09 


9 
v 


a2 REPCRT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


Seton-Karr, of London, England. A carved stone image in the 
form of a standing figure with elaborate headdress, 20$ inches high, 
from the ruins of ancient Tepoxtlan, State of Morelos, Mexico, was 
lent by Mrs. Harriet L. Dowling, of Washington, and 4 collections, 
consisting mainly of prehistoric pottery, together with many shell 
and stone artifacts, were deposited by Mr. A. H. Blackiston, of Cum- 
berland, Maryland. <A cast of the largest known stone celt, found 
near Granite, Illinois, in 1906, was received in exchange from the 
Public Museum of Milwaukee. Many plaster casts of prehistoric 
stone implements owned elsewhere were made in the Museum 
laboratory by Mr. H. W. Hendley. 

Comparatively few additions were made to the exhibition collec- 
tions, which occupy the large upper hall in the Smithsonian building, 
but the labeling and recording of the many specimens received during 
the year occupied much time. The classification and arrangement 
by subjects of the general collections, which are extensive and of 
great importance, were continued. Researches based on this material 
were chiefly carried on by Mr. William H. Holmes, curator of the 
division, and Dr. J. W. Fewkes, collaborator. Several persons not 
connected with the Museum also made use of the collections. Among 
these were Mr. James C. Christie, of Glasgow, Scotland, w ho worked 
on material from the West Indies, Mexico, and Central America; 
Dr. Arthur L. Mitchell, of Aurora, New York, who examined certain 
kinds of stone implements from the United States; and Mr. C. H. 
Gallup, curator of the Firelands Historical Museum, of Norwalk, 
Ohio, who studied the arts of the mound builders. The exchanges 
of specimens, though not unimportant, were limited in number and 
extent. 

The sundry civil act for 1908 provided for continuing the excava- 
tions at Casa Grande ruin, in Arizona, under the direction of the 
Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, and for the protection and 
improvement of the Mesa Verde National Park, Colorado, under the 
supervision of the Secretary of the Interior. Dr. J. W. Fewkes, who 
conducted operations at both of these places, obtained a large and 
valuable collection, but at the end of the year it had not reached the 
Museum. 

Historic archeology—Among the accessions in historic archeology 
may be mentioned a gift from President Roosevelt of a brass model 
of the obelisk of Rameses IT, the original of which stood in front of 
the temple of Luxor, but is now in the Place de la Concorde in Paris; 
some valuable inscribed pottery fragments from Egypt, presented 
by Mr. F. B. Kilmer; and two wax impressions of a signet ring from 
Mr. Benjamin H. Boyadjian, of Turkey. This ring, which 1s en- 
eraved with human busts so that the upper part represents a man’s 
face and the lower end the head of a boar, is interesting from both 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. oo 


the mythological and art historical points of view. The exhibits of 
the division occupy two alcoves in the west hall of the Museum 
building facing the rotunda. The northwest alcove contains mainly 
the antiquities of western Asia, namely, the Biblical, Palestinian, 
Syrian, Assyro-Babylonian, and Persian, while the southwest alcove 
is occupied by the Egyptian and Hittite antiquities. During the 
year a special case with Egyptian antiquities was installed and speci- 
mens of Egyptian (Coptic) textiles were put on exhibition. Addi- 
tions were also made to the Bible collection. 

Historie religions —Especially noteworthy among the accessions 
of the year were 21 objects of Jewish religious ceremonial, added by 
Dr. Ephraim Benguiat, of New York, to his important loan collee- 
tion which has been on exhibition for several years. They comprise 
2 finely embroidered synagogue veils, 2 silver-gilt breastplates of 
exquisite workmanship, a silver and brass Hanukah lamp of artistic 
design, a quaint brass spice holder, composed of 5 pear-shaped com- 
partments surmounted by lions, and 8 framed pictures illustrating 
the story of Joseph worked in embroidery. Dr. Cyrus Adler, curator 
of the division, presented a pair of phylacteries from Jerusalem, and 
Miss Eliza R. Scidmore, of Washington, a model of the church at 
Borgund, Norway. 

The exhibition collections illustrating the historic religions are 
mainly installed on the south gallery of the west hall, in the follow- 
ing order: Judaism in six wall cases and two Kensington cases, Mo- 
hammedanism in two wall cases and one special case, Christianity 
in four wall eases and two special cases, Brahmanism in two wall 
‘ases and one special case, Buddhism in five wall cases and one special 
vase, Shintoism in one wall case, other Eastern religious objects in 
one wall case, and Parseeism in one special case. Three Kensington 
‘ases contain, respectively, collections of amulets and rosaries and a 
Korean sorcerer’s outfit. The S. 8S. Howland collection of Buddhist 
religious art in two large cases and colossal statues of Buddha and 
Vishnu are placed in the rotunda. Objects of the several sections, 
which for lack of space can not be exhibited at present, such as photo- 
graphs, prints, ete., are contained in drawers. The Jewish section 
was partly, and the Christian section entirely, rearranged and labeled. 
A case of Buddhist rosaries and a statuette of Confucius were added. 

A manuscript entitled: The Collection of Jewish Ceremonial Ob- 
jects in the United States National Museum, containing descriptions 
of the objects, with photographic illustrations, was completed by 
Doctor Adler and Doctor Casanowicez. A study of the collection of 
rosaries by Doctor Casanowicz is In progress. 

Physical anthropology.—The more important acquisitions by this 
division consisted of a large collection of skeletal parts, received in 
exchange from Prof. George 8S. Huntington, of the College of Phy- 


34 REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


sicians and Surgeons, New York; 2 series of the brains of an- 
thropoid apes and of monkeys, 1 from West Borneo the other from 
Sumatra, donated by Dr. W. L. Abbott; 54 specimens, the gift of 
Prof. F. P. Mall, of Johns Hopkins University; 10 well-preserved 
skulls from mounds along the Arkansas River, including 1 example 
of a rave anomaly and several of the flathead deformation, presented 
by Mr. Clarence B. Moore, of Philadelphia; 8 Eskimo skeletons, ob- 
tained on the Smithsonian expedition to Alaska under Mr. C. W. 
Gilmore; 7 brains and 19 skeletons from various medical schools; 
5 Indian skulls and other bones from Casa Grande ruin, Arizona, 
collected by Dr. J. W. Fewkes; and 2 Filipino skulls, 9 brains, and 
15 heads of monkeys, contributed by Dr. Robert Bennett Bean, of 
the Philippine Medical School, Manila. The gift by Mr. J. G. Craw- 
ford, of Albany, Oregon, of a skull with a remarkably low fore- 
head, and a collection of human bones, including another skull with 
low forehead, made by Mr. Gerard Fowke and transmitted by the 
Bureau of American Ethnology, are likewise deserving of mention. 
There were also added to the collection 26 life masks of Indians, 19 
of which were made by the assistant curator with the aid of Mr. 
TE. W. Hendley, at the Jamestown Exposition, and 5 busts, prepared 
from these molds. The Bureau of American Ethnology supplied 
other valuable material besides that above mentioned, and through 
its aid a number of Indians were sent to the Museum for measuring 
and the taking of masks. 

In the preservation and installation of specimens the work of the 
division is entirely up-to-date. A series of skulls with various stages 
of a proatlas and fusion of the atlas with the skull has been arranged 
in the laboratory and proves of much interest to visiting physicians 
as well as anthropologists. The exhibits consist of 32 Indian busts, 
placed in the Catlin Hall, and of such groups of specimens as can 
conveniently be shown in the laboratory cases. The latter comprise 
several collections of crania of special interest, racial pelvises, cranial 
and dental anomalies; brains, human and comparative; fossilized 
human bones, with examples of low-developed recent crania, and 
easts of the European geologically ancient skulls; skulls showing 
teeth filing and carving, painting and tattooing; examples of ancient 
American trephining, and skulls showing types and individual varia- 
tions of artificial deformations. 

The scientific work of the division by Dr. Ales’ Hrdhéka, assistant 
curator in charge, has been mainly a continuation of that of the previ- 
ous year, relating especially to the humerus, which is now nearing 
completion. Tlis paper on skeletal remains and that entitled 
Physiological and medical observations among the Indians of the 
Southwest and northern Mexico will soon be issued as bulletins of 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. BO 


the Bureau of American Ethnology. Descriptions of two especially 
interesting skulls, recently received, are in course of publication in 
the Proceedings of the Museum. A report was furnished to Mr. Clar- 
ence B. Moore on the collection of crania which he donated to the 
Museum, for incorporation in his memoir, and a revision, with addi- 
tions, of the paper on Brain Weight in Vertebrates, has been under- 
taken. Finally, several minor reports and a presidential address be- 
fore the Anthropological Society of Washington by Doctor Hrdli¢ka 
were based upon his Museum investigations, and he also rendered aid 
in the preparation of the second volume of the Handbook of Indians 
for the Bureau of American Ethnology. 

In connection with his researches, as well as for the purpose of 
securing additions to the collections, Doctor Hrdliéka was detailed to 
the Jamestown Exposition, where, with the assistance of Mr. Hendley, 
he measured and made casts of 2 Eskimo, 2 Panama Indians, and 15 
Oglala Sioux. He was in New York in October to arrange for obtain- 
ing examples of such ancient human remains as might be discovered 
in the course of the excavations in Egypt by the Metropolitan Museum 
of Art, which has generously tendered its cooperation in the matter, 
although involving extra labor and expense on its part. Subse- 
quently, in company with Dr. J. EK. Benedict, he visited Ward’s Nat- 
ural Science Establishment in Rochester, the College of Physicians 
and Surgeons, the American Museum of Natural History, the Rocke- 
feller Pathological Institute, the Museum of the Brooklyn Institute, 
and the Wistar Institute of Anatomy, for the purpose of ascertaining 
the more recent improvements in methods of preparing skeletons. 

Technology.—The additions in technology were exceptionally nu- 
merous and valuable. Of greatest importance were many models and 
some full-sized examples of interesting inventions transferred from 
the Patent Office. The latter include a large number of pistols, 
revolvers, carbines, rifles, etc., illustrating noteworthy devices which 
have developed into special systems of firearms now extensively used 
for military and other purposes. Among these are the Hotchkiss and 
Krag-Jérgensen magaziie rifles, Winchester tubular magazine guns, 
North guns and pistols, many of which were made for the United 
States Army in the early part of the last century; the Sharps, Joslyn, 
Lawrence, Jenks, Spencer, Maynard, Merrill, Burnside, Lindner, 
Burton, Berdan, and other breech-loading guns. The early founda- 
tion inventions, on which the Colt and the Smith & Wesson sys- 
tems of revolvers are based, are also represented. Some of the other 
subjects to which the models relate are printing presses, sewing ma- 
chines, typewriters, electrical inventions, telegraph repeaters, time 
bank locks, looms, spinning and knitting machinery,.etc. The col- 
lection of steam machinery models is very important, including sev- 
eral by John Ericsson, who is also represented by his inventions in 


36 REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


gunnery and other classes. Among the models of locomotives are 
those showing the inventions of Asa Whitney, 1840; M. W. Baldwin, 

1842; G. A. Nicholls, 1848; A. Cathcart, 1849; and Ross Wi inans, 1851. 
Sey men inventions of George H. Carlie and William Sellers are like- 
wise illustrated. 

Another notable accession, deposited by Dr. Alexander Graham 
Bell, consists of about 150 pieces of apparatus devised and used by 
him in his earliest experiments to produce a practical speaking tele- 
phone, which resulted in the establishment of the present system of 
the American Bell Telephone Company, now in general use through- 
out the world. The U.S. Geological Survey transferred an important 
collection of typical instruments and appliances such as have been em- 
ployed by the survey, comprising a number of gradienters, alidade, 
alt-azimuth instruments, aneroid barometers, heliotropes, leveling 
rods, odometers of different. forms, two aluminum bench-mark tablets, 
and ten pie ‘es of apparatus used in the water resource branch of the 
service, principally for measuring the flow and velocity of streams. 

Col. A. TH. Russell, U.S. Army, deposited a number of experimental 
magazine rifles illustrating his inventions, which form the basis of the 
magazine rifles now in use in the United States Army, together with 
a number of bronze Spanish mortars and small cannon collected by 
him in the Philippine Islands. From the Bureau of Ordnance, War 
Department, there were received three of the latest, or 1906, pattern 
of army magazine rifles, one United States magazine rifle of the 
model of 1903, with bayonet, complete, and the component parts of a 
similar rifle arranged separately to show the construction and oper- 
ation of this arm. Among the other accessions were 2 English tower 
flint-lock pistols with brass barrels and bell muzzles of superior work- 
manship, lent by Mr. Richard Rathbun; 2 boxes of percussion pills, 
introduced about 1840 and extensively used between the time of the 
flint-lock and percussion-lock guns, obtained from Davis Brothers, 
Kent, Ohio; the engine used in Professor Langley’s full-size aero- 
drome, deposited by the Smithsonian Institution; 6 models of Jap- 
anese fishing boats, transferred by the Bureau of Fisheries; a model 
of a canvas canoe of the type now in general use, presented by the 
Oldtown Canoe Company, Oldtown, Maine; an old bicyele with 
wooden wheels, contributed by Mr. C. Howard Buckler, of Washing- 
ton; an old iron-frame bicycle, donated by Mr. William Sturgis Bige- 
low, of Boston; an old grasshopper bicycle, about 1875 to 1880, pre- 
sented by Mr. Thomas M. Wilkins, of Washington; a Pomo Indian 
Tule boat, a survival of the ancient form, made in 1906 by an old 
Pomo Indian, from the Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences; 
models of Robert Fulton’s steamship Clermont and Fitch’s steamboat, 
by transfer from the State Department; two Starr carbines, dupheate 
models of the steamboats Savannah and Phoenix, and models of a 


lard 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 37 


primitive American sledge and a farm sled, from the Jamestown Ex- 
position; and part of a self-registering wind vane, devised and used 
by Prof. James H. Coffin, at Ogdensburg, N. Y., in 1837, donated by 
Prof. Selden J. Coffin, of Easton, Pa. 

Ceramics.—Owing to lack of space, the gallery assigned to the sub- 
ject of ceramics has also been used for objects of several other classes, 
such as metal and glass work, lacquers, etc., which it has been custo- 
mary to mention under the same heading. Miss E. R. Scidmore made 
a large addition to her loan collection already on exhibition. It con- 
sisted of 92 pieces of valuable porcelains, together with some bronze, 
jade, and lacquer objects, and has been installed in a large wall cese 
on the south side of the gallery. The Korean pottery cases and the 
Olive Risley Seward collection were rearranged and more completely 
labeled. Lacking the services of an expert during the past year, but 
little work was done in the division beyond attending to the safety of 
the collections and the arrangement of such material as was received. 

Graphic arts—Noteworthy among the additions to the photo- 
graphic section was a large platinum portrait of Joseph Henry, 
the first Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, presented by 
Mr. F. Gutekunst, of Philadelphia. The transfers from the Patent 
Office included a daguerreotype camera of 1851, two stereoscopic 
daguerreotype cameras of 1854, a series of mechanical devices for 
cleaning and burnishing daguerreotype plates which is probably 
unequaled elsewhere, and numerous other objects illustrating the 
history of photography. While the collections of the division have 
been maintained in good condition, the exhibition series has been 
rendered practically inaccessible by the overcrowding of the hall, 
and many objects have had to be withdrawn and temporarily placed 
in storage. Tools and materials belonging in the division were 
oceasionally used for teaching purposes. A synoptical exhibit from 
the section of photography was sent to the Jamestown Exposition. 
It represented the more important epochs in the development of 
photography, beginning with the first permanent photograph made 
in any part of the world and the first camera constructed in the 
United States. 

Musical instruments—An interesting addition to the collection 
of musical instruments consisted of an example of the old melopeon 
(harmonium), at one time manufactured by John W. Scott at Cadiz, 
Ohio, well illustrating the early free reed keyboard instruments. 
It was presented by the heirs of Mr. Scott through his daughter, 
Mrs. G. W. Woodborne, of Uhrichsville, Ohio. Miss Delia Curtis, of 
Windsor, Ontario, contributed an old melodeon with folding legs, 
revealing the mechanism of instruments of this type. Thirteen. 
musical instruments, donated by Dr. William L. Abbott, are of 
particular value as opening a new field of study, since they were 


38 REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


mostly collected among the wild tribes of the Malay Islands. The 
descriptive catalogue of the instruments belonging to the Museum 
has been continued by Mr. E. H. Hawley, who is also engaged in 
preparing a list of the musical instruments of all countries. No 
changes were made in the public installation. In addition to the 
developmental exhibits in the north hall, some progress was made 
in assembling those instruments which are used by the national bands 
of different peoples. 

Medicine.—One of the most important accessions of the year was 
a large collection of Chinese drugs, sent as a gift by Dr. N. Gist Gee, 
of Soochow University, China. There should also be mentioned a 
cease of dental instruments, containing 218 articles, made and used 
by Dr. Edward Maynard, one of the eminent early dentists of this 
country, and deposited in 1907 by Dr. George W. Maynard, of New 
York. The collection specially prepared for the Jamestown Exposi- 
tion by the curator, Dr. James M. Flint, U. S. Navy, was incorpo- 
rated with the exhibits in the Museum on its return to Washington. 
Its most notable feature was an historical series of portraits of dis- 
tinguished physicians. Steps have been taken to place this important 
division on a broader and more practical basis as soon as the neces- 
sary space becomes available through the completion of the new 
building. 

History.—The number of permanent accessions received by this 
division was 36, and of temporary accessions 16, comprising 891 
objects. Foremost among the additions was the flag which floated 
over Fort McHenry, Baltimore, during the bombardment by the 
British fleet on the mght of September 13-14, 1814, and made 
famous as The Star-Spangled Banner by the verses of Francis 
Scott Key, an eyewitness of the gallant fight. The flag, retained 
by Col. George Armistead, the commander of the fort, descended 
to his grandson, Mr. Eben Appleton, of New York, who has most 
generously allowed it to be exhibited to the public in the National 
Museum. This notable relic is so tattered and torn that it has been 
necessary to protect it with a backing of canvas. It measures 32 
feet 10 inches in length and 27 feet 6 inches in width. 

A collection of 175 specimens of Lowestoft china and cut glass 
used at Mount Vernon by General and Mrs. Washington was de- 
posited by Miss Nannie R. Heth, of Washington. Through bequest, 
the late Henry R. Magruder, of Baltimore, left to the Smithsonian 
Institution a number of historical and other objects, including a 
beautiful gold-mounted sword and silver pitcher presented to his 
father, Lieut. Col. J. Bankhead Magruder, by citizens of Virginia 
and Maryland. The late Stephen Decatur Smith, of Philadelphia, 
bequeathed to the Museum a plain gold ring of unusual interest, since 
it had been given by Richard Somers to Stephen Decatur just before 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 39 


the former met his heroic death on the Intrepid in the war with 
Tripoh, in 1804. A pistol and 9 military commissions were added 
to the collection of Gen. George W. Morgan, U. S. Army, by his 
widow, now residing at Zanesville, Ohio, and a marble top table 
which had belonged to Thomas Jefferson was received as a gift from 
Mrs. Frederic C. Brinton, of West Chester, Pennsylvania. Several 
relics of the Sutton family of Virginia were donated by Mrs. Minnie 
J. Elliott, of Washington, and Mr. William R. Hawkins, of Eden, 
Arizona, presented the life-preserver worn by the late Maj. J. W. 
Powell during his first and most notable exploration of the Green 
and Colorado rivers and their great canyons. The. Field Museum 
of Natural History, Chicago, contributed 18 pieces of Arctic cloth- 
ing and other articles used by members of the Greely Relief Expe- 
dition. The Rev. J. L. and Mr. Leon L. L. French, of Washington, 
deposited a large collection of historical relics, relating mainly to 
the civil war. The National Society, Colonial Dames of America, 
added 50 objects to its collection and the National Society, Daughters 
of the American Revolution, also increased its deposit. A chair from 
Morro Castle and an Indian beaded cane, relics of the late Sergt. 
Hamilton Fish of the Rough Riders, who was killed in Cuba, were 
presented by Mrs. Nicholas Fish, of Washington. From the govern- 
ment exhibits at the Jamestown and Bordeaux expositions a large 
number of photographs, photographic enlargements, and other his- 
torical material were received. 


DEPARTMENT OF BIOLOGY. 


Accessions of greater or less extent were received from the custom- 
ary government sources, such as the Bureau of Fisheries, the Bu- 
reau of Plant Industry, the Bureau of Entomology, the Biological 
Survey, and the Forest Service, as explained further on. Among 
private contributors Dr, W. L. Abbott and Maj. E. A. Mearns, U. 8S. 
Army, stand foremost, the former having presented several hundred 
mammals, birds, and reptiles, mainly from Siak River, Sumatra, and 
southwestern Borneo; the latter, over 1,000 bird skins, about 250 
specimens of bats and other mammals, and many land shells, from 
the Philippines. Both of these collections contain a large number 
of new species and some new genera. 

This department has also been more or less benefited by recent ex- 
plorations of the Leland Stanford Junior University in Japan, the 
Philippine Islands, the Fiji Islands, California, and Mexico; of M. de 
Rothschild’s expedition to East Africa; of the Egyptian Government 
in the Nile Valley; of Charcot in the Antarctic region; of Prof. J. Fid 
Tristan and Dr. A. Alfaro in Costa Rica; of Dr. S. E. Meek at Lake 
Amatitlan, Guatemala; of Mr, William Schaus in Central America; 


40 REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


of Dr. J. C. Thompson, U. 8S. Navy, among the Tortugas Islands; of 
the Gulf Biological Station about Cameron, Louisiana; of Dr. Glover 
M. Allen in eastern Labrador; and of Mr. Owen Bryant and Dr. W. T. 
Grenfell in Newfoundland. Dr. C. G. Abbot, Director of the Smith- 
sonian Astrophysical Observatory, made a small but valuable collec- 
tion of marine animals at Flint Island, near Tahiti, while engaged 
in preparations for observing the solar eclipse of January 3, 1908. 
Acknowledgments are also due to Dr. Holton C. Curl, U. 8S. Navy, 
for his active cooperation in interesting persons in authority to secure 
material from the Philippine Islands and elsewhere. 

Important researches were carried on by the members of the scien- 
tific staff as a basis for the classification of the collections, and the 
publications of the year were especially extensive and valuable. But 
few sets of specimens were distributed to educational institutions, as 
little opportunity was found for the separation of duplicates and 
their labeling and packing for this purpose. The exchanges were also 
limited for the same reason, consisting mainly of insects, fishes, and 
marine invertebrates. The number of specimens sent to specialists 
outside of Washington for study and description was very large. 

Mammals.—The extensive collections from Doctor Abbott and 
Doctor Mearns have been referred to above. Noteworthy among the 
other additions is a fine specimen of the rare Chinese antelope known 
as the Takin (Budorcas), presented by Mr. Mason Mitchell, Amer- 
ican consul at Chungking. It is probably the only complete skin in 
America. Dr. J. C. Le Hardy, U.S. Army, contributed a skin of the 
Tamarao or dwarf wild carabao of the Philippine Islands, the first 
of this rare species to reach the Museum. The head and horns of a 
specimen of the large feral or wild carabao were presented by Col. 
E. B. Babbitt, U. S. Army, through Capt. Frank R. McCoy, U. 58. 
Army. From the National Zoological Park 186 animals, chiefly 
mammals, were received, including many large and important forms, 
such as the mule deer, pronghorn, Duvaucel’s deer, spring buck, lion, 
puma, Alaska grizzly bear, black bear, California sea lion, Steller’s 
sea lion, moufflon, zebu, and gray kangaroo. A series of 166 antlers 
and 26 scalps of the American elk from the Jackson Hole region, 
western Wyoming, was transmitted through the Department of Jus- 
tice. The antlers are of unusual size and together probably consti- 
tute the largest collection from one locality to be found in any 
museum. They are especially valuable for the study of individual 
variation in this species of deer. A skeleton of the porpoise known 
as Steno rostratus was purchased. Although skulls of porpoises of 
this genus are common in the larger museums, only a very few skele- 
tons have been preserved. 

In continuation of work done last year, all the skins of insectivores, 
squirrels, chipmunks, ground squirrels, flying squirrels, Old World 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. Al 


poreupines, and South American octodont rats, as well as the squirrel 
skulls and bat skeletons, were rearranged, and the cases and trays 
containing them furnished with typewritten labels. Considerable 
attention was given to the large and medium-sized skulls, and the 
alcoholic series, especially the large collection of bats, was much im- 
proved in arrangement and labeling. Some 3,200 skulls, chiefly large 
ones, were cleaned ; about 100 large skins were tanned and folded, and 
38 smaller ones made over. 

A practically complete skeleton of the very rare Baird’s beaked 
whale, Berardius bairdii, from California, about 40 feet long, was 
mounted for the osteological hall. It is probably the only one of its 
kind exhibited in any museum, and this and another received from 
the Pribilof Islands represent the largest beaked whales thus far 
recorded. A Kashmir stag was added to the series representing large 
game, and 9 small mammals were incorporated in the general ex- 
hibition series. It was found necessary to replace the floor in the 
large wall case on the east side of the south hall, requiring the tem- 
porary removal of all the specimens, which were overhauled and 
renovated. 

Dr. F. W. True, head curator of the department, and three assist- 
ants made several visits to the Calvert Cliffs, Maryland, in search 
of fossil cetaceans, of which they obtained a large amount of material, 
including a nearly complete skeleton of a fossil porpoise, discovered 
by Mr. William Palmer. Doctor True continued his investigations 
on the recent North American forms belonging to this group, pre- 
paring papers on some of the species, on the Zeuglodont genus Doru- 
don and on the classification of the Cetacea. He has also about com- 
pleted a manuscript treating of the recent beaked whales. Dr. M. W. 
Lyon, jr., assistant curator, prepared two papers, one on the horns 
and systematic position of the American antelope, the other on the 
mammals collected by Doctor Abbott along the east coast of Sumatra, 
the latter containing descriptions of 13 new forms. He also began 
work on Doctor Abbott’s latest collection from the Rhio-Linga Archi- 
pelago, and southwestern Borneo and nearby islands. A list of the 
type specimens of mammals preserved in the Museum, including 
those in the collection of the Biological Survey, was compiled for 
publication jointly by Doctor Lyon, Mr. W. H. Osgood, and Doctor 
True. 

To Dr. E. A. Mearns, who has begun studies preliminary to a 
manual of the mammals of the Philippine Islands, was sent a number 
of fruit bats, and specimens of the Almiqui (Solenodon) were lent to 
Dr. J. A. Allen, of the American Museum of Natural History, who is 
working up the Haitian species. Many European mammals were 
forwarded to Mr. Gerrit S. Miller, jr., who is now at the British 
Museum, preparing a general work on the European fauna, and some 


42 REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


bats and other small mammals were supplied to Mr. Oldfield Thomas 
and Mr. Knud Andersen, of the same museum. Dr. Glover M. Allen 
examined specimens of South American bats, and Dr. Tf. D. Reed 
borrowed a number of specimens for use in the preparation of a 
list of species occurring in the vicinity of Ithaca, New York. Mr. W. 
K. Gregory, of Columbia University, New York, spent several days 
at the Museum studying the skulls and teeth of insectivores from an 
evolutionary standpoint; Mr. E, E. Heller, of the University of Cali- 
fornia, examined types of mammals of northwestern America; and 
Mr. J. T. Nichols, of the American Museum of Natural History, 
devoted some time to making comparisons of porpoise skulls. As in 
previous years, the naturalists of the Biological Survey made exten- 
sive use of the collections. 

Birds.—Doctor Abbott and Doctor Mearns, as previously explained, 
were among the principal contributors of bird skins. Mr. Robert 
Ridgway, curator of the division, was in Costa Rica from January 
to May, 1908, on the invitation of Mr. José C. Zeledon, a zealous 
friend of the Museum, who most generously paid the expenses of the 
field work, besides personally supervising its details and employing 
a professional taxidermist. The principal object of Mr. Ridgway’s 
trip was to collect information and specimens for use in the prepara- 
tion of his manual on the Birds of North and Middle America, now 
in course of publication by the Museum. He brought back with him 
about 1,600 specimens. 

Costa Riean birds to the number of 154, including topotypes of 
recently described species, were also obtained from Mr. Outram Bangs, 
of Boston, partly by gift and partly by exchange. The late Mrs. 
P. L. Jouy presented about 500 birds, chiefly North American, which 
had been collected by her husband; Corpl. Robert A. Schroder, U. S. 
Army, contributed 45 specimens, including the type of a new sub- 
species of fantail flycatcher, from Mount Malindang, Mindanao 
Island; Maj. John R. White, a number of specimens from Palawan; 
and Mr. Owen Bryant, of Cohasset, Mass., a collection of 48 New- 
foundland birds, containing two skins of a recently described wood- 
pecker. Twenty-five specimens from southeastern Europe, Morocco, 
ete., were donated by Mr. J. H. Riley, of the Museum: and 9 speci- 
mens from the Chatham Islands, New Zealand, were obtained in 
exchange from Mr. J. H. Fleming, of Toronto, Canada. Among the 
latter were examples of several species which have become rare. Mr. 
EK. J. Court, of Washington, presented the type specimen of the 
heron, Ardea herodias treganze. 

The important task of relabeling the study collection of bird skins 
progressed satisfactorily, covering the contents of 71 quarter-unit 
and 19 half-unit cases. This work is now complete for about three- 
sevenths of the collection. New written labels were supplied for the 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 43 


petrels, ducks, geese, shore birds, auks, jaegers, skimmers, and terns. 
All the specimens received during the year, including over 1,100 
Philippine birds presented by Doctor Mearns, were also furnished 
with standard labels. Seventy storage cases were marked with type- 
written labels, giving their contents by families and genera, and also 
noting the genera not in the Museum collection. Many imperfectly 
prepared or damaged specimens of value were made over by the 
taxidermist, but only a few minor changes were made in the exhibi- 
tion series. 

Mr. Ridgway continued the preparation of the fifth part of the 
manual of North American birds, giving special attention to the 
humming birds and woodpeckers. Dr. C. W. Richmond completed 
a supplement to Waterhouse’s index of genera of birds, bringing the 
subject down from 1901 to 1905, and also added over 3,000 cards 
to the catalogue of genera and species of birds, on which he has been 
at work for some time. Mr. Riley, besides assisting Mr. Ridgway, 
contributed a paper on the West Indian forms of the hawk, Buteo 
platypterus. Work on Doctor Abbott’s collection of Malayan birds 
was continued by Mr. H. S. Oberholser, of the Biological Survey, 
who also prepared a paper on the kingfishers of the genus Pelargopsis. 
based chiefly on Museum material. Bird skins to the number of 368 
were lent for study to 8 ornithologists. 

Reptiles and batrachians.—Dr. V. Brazil, director of the Instituto 
Serumtherapico do Estado de Sao Paulo, Brazil, transmitted in ex- 
change 13 specimens of snakes, representing 8 species, of which 7 
are poisonous. They came from Butautan, and include one recently- 
described form. An excellent collection of 40 salamanders from 
North Carolina was purchased. Prof. J. Grinnell, of Pasadena, 
California, presented a large series of the rare California lizard, 
Xantusia vigilis; and Mr. W. T. Davis, of New Brighton, New York, 
specimens of the two rare frogs, Tyla andersoni and Rana virgatipes, 
from Lakehurst, New Jersey. 

Doctor Stejneger’s extensive treatise on the reptiles of Japan and 
the neighboring mainland of Asia, based chiefly on Museum material, 
was completed and published early in the year. He later continued 
the study of the reptiles of the Philippine Islands, describing several 
new species, and conducted investigations regarding the geographical 
distribution of Asiatic and North American species and the origin 
of the reptihan fauna of Japan. He also spent some time on a 
revision of certain North and Central American genera of snakes and 
batrachians. 

Fishes.—The Egyptian Government, at the suggestion of Dr. G. A. 
Boulenger, of the British Museum, presented through its minister 
of education an excellent collection of fishes from the River Nile. 
Numerous types and cotypes of new species from Japan, the Philip- 


44 REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


pine Islands, and other localities, descriptions of which have been 
published in the Proceedings of the Museum, were received from 
Stanford University. Mr. A. Alfaro, director of the National 
Museum of Costa Rica, donated some 40 specimens from Costa Rica, 
and Dr. J. C. Thompson, U.S. Navy, a fine lot of specimens from the 
Tortugas Islands. The Bureau of Fisheries transmitted a large and 
choice collection from Maine, Alaska, and elsewhere, including types 
and cotypes of new species. A collection of Formosan fishes was 
purchased. 

The number of fishes catalogued during the year was about 20,000, 
the receipts from the Bureau of Fisheries alone amounting to many 
thousands. A large proportion of the specimens was transferred to 
jars and labeled, the type specimens, marked with the customary 
red labels, being added to the type series. The specimens stored in 
tanks were overhauled, the duplicates separated out and new lists 
of the contents prepared. Good progress was made with the card 
catalogues of both the type and regular reserve series. Mr. B. A. 
Bean, the assistant curator, continued his study of the fishes of Flor- 
ida, the large collection from that region being brought together for 
this purpose. A considerable number of species was added to the 
faunal list, and some apparently undescribed species were detected. 
Mr. Bean also spent some time in working up a collection of Costa 
Rican fishes. 

Znsects.—The number of insects received during the year amounted 
to about 53,000, of which the U, S. Department of Agriculture 
transmitted 600 European parasitic Hymenoptera identified by Mr. 
QO. Schmiedeknecht ; about 1,150 named Coleoptera from Kurope and 
Java obtained from Mr. A. L. Montandon; about 4,200 Lepidoptera, 
TOO mosquitoes, and 3,000 miscellaneous insects collected by Mr. F. 
Knab; about 2,000 mosquitoes and 4,000 miscellaneous insects secured 
in Panama by Mr. A. Busck, and about 4,000 Tlymenoptera collected 
near Washington, District of Columbia, by Mr. H. H. Smith. 
Among the other accessions one of the most important consisted of 
about 4,770 identified Coleoptera and 750 Hemiptera and Hymenop- 
tera, presented by Mr. IF’. D. Godman, of London, being a part of the 
material gathered for the publication Biologia Centrali-Americana. 
Mr. William Schaus added to his previous large donations about 
8.200 Lepidoptera, chiefly from Costa Rica. <A collection of 275 
mosquitoes, including several new species from Panama, was con- 
tributed by Mr. A. H. Jennings of Ancon, Canal Zone. The Wash- 
ington Biologists’ Field Club presented about 800 specimens from 
Plummer’s Island, Maryland. 

General work on the collection of insects was mainly confined to 
the Lepidoptera and Coleoptera, a large number of the former and 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 45 


some of the latter, together with a few specimens of other orders, 
being transferred to the permanent drawers recently furnished. 

The exhibition of insects in the west range of the Smithsonian 
building was practically completed as far as the available space 
permitted. During the year the old exhibits of termites and their 
work and of the Rocky Mountain locust were renovated and replaced 
in the series, new specimens being added to the former and new labels 
prepared. An illustration of the work of hymenopterous insects was 
also begun. A display of local insects, consisting of about 1,000 
species “of Coleoptera, Orthoptera, and Odonata, contained in 7 unit 
boxes, forms the beginning of a series intended to cover ail orders. 
Many butterflies and other insects have been collected for this series 
and will be installed later. Two additional unit boxes contain dragon 
flies from Japan and beetles from Africa. A series of especially 
injurious insects was projected, but only the boll weevil and the gipsy 
moth, together with some 30 species of mosquitoes, including those 
causing yellow fever and malaria, were placed on exhibition. Con- 
siderable work was done on the series representing mimicry, ete. 

Dr. L. O. Howard, Dr. H’ G. Dyar, and Mr. Frederick Knab con- 
tinued work on a monograph of the mosquitoes of North and Central 
America and the West Indies, which was the principal investigation 
of the year. About 8,700 insects were lent to entomologists in the 
United States and Europe for study and identification. The entire 
collection of bumblebees and Psithyridee was placed in the hands of 
Mr. H. J. Franklin, of Amherst College, for monographing. Speci- 
mens of beetles of the subfamily Aleocharine to the number of about 
9,500 were sent to Dr. A. Fenyes, of Pasadena, California, who has 
offered to identify the named species and determine the others ge- 
nerically, and later he will probably describe the new forms. Prof. 
H. C. Fall, also of Pasadena, received several hundred beetles of the 
genus Diplotavis of which he is preparing a memoir; and Mr. G. C, 
Champion, of London, England, a large number of North and Central 
American weevils of the family Barididee, for examination in connec- 
tion with his work on the Biologia Centrali-Americana. About 2,000 
specimens of Tineid moths were taken to England by Mr. August 
Busck, for comparison with collections in that country. 

Mollusks—Besides the material elsewhere referred to, there were 
acquired by exchange about 330 species of Philippine land shells 
from the Mollendorff and Quadras collections. Of the 1,500 species 
known from these islands, the Museum has now authentically-named 
specimens of about 1,330 species. Some 280 species of land shells 
from Madeira, the Canaries, and other Atlantic islands, including 
cotypes of species described by Lowe and Wollaston, and type speci- 
mens of 20 Mexican and Central and South American species de- 
scribed by Preston, were obtained by purchase. Mr. Charles Hedley 


46 REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


of the Australian Museum, Sydney, New South Wales, sent a collec- 
tion of Australian species, and Mr. Henry Suter, of Auckland, New 
Zealand, one of New Zealand species, both consisting largely of co- 
types. An excellent lot of land shelis from Mexico, including new 
species, was presented by Dr. Edward Palmer, of the U. S. Depart- 
ment of Agriculture, and some important Californian specimens 
were received from Dr. R. H. Tremper, of Ontario, California. 

Dr. Paul Bartsch, the assistant curator of the division, was detailed 
to accompany the Bureau of Fisheries steamer Albatross to the 
Philippine Islands, for the purpose of making zoological collections 
for the Museum. He left Washington on October 9, 1907, and had 
not returned at the close of the year. While no material has yet 
been received from this source, it is understood that a large amount, 
consisting chiefly of marine invertebrates, land shells, and birds, has 
been obtained. On account of the absence of Doctor Bartsch, the 
routine work of the division was greatly handicapped. The most 
important result in this direction was the completion of the labeling 
and cataloguing of the Jeffreys collection, comprising about 110,000 
specimens, concerning which the curator, Dr. William H. Dall, 
reports as follows: 


The event which is most prominent in the operations of the year, is the 
conclusion of the labeling and registering of the Jeffreys collection of British, 
Mediterranean, North Atlantic, and North Kuropean shells. As a very large 
proportion of the collection las served as a basis for publications by Turton, 
Bean, Clark, Jeffreys, Weinkauff, and other more modern authors, the material 
partakes so much of the nature of types, when the specimens are not the actual 
figured types (as is the case in a multitude of instances), that the utmost care 
has been necessary to preserve the identity and the data connected with each 
lot of specimens. As many abbreviations were used and, in the case of the 
Poreupine and other deep-sea explorations, offen merely the station number 
was given as locality, the work had to be done with extreme care and very 
slowly, for the most part when not hurried by other more urgent duties. 

This work was begun in 1SS3 by Miss Nicholson, who completed the registra- 
tion and arrangement of the land and fresh-water shells; it bas been carried 
on subsequently under my supervision by others, chiefly by Mr. W. B. Marshall, 
to whose care, assiduity, and perseverance the satisfactory completion of the 
work is finally due. The entries in the register, representing single lots of 
specimens from a single locality, number 27,490; the largest number registered 
and labeled in any one season was about 4,000 lots. Owing to my absence in 
the field during some years, nothing was done, as I have supervised every stage 
of the work personally. The collection occupies the equivalent space in drawers 
afforded by seven standard table cases, and contains approximately 110,000 
specimens. 

The further work upon the collection involves writing slips indicating the 
species present for each half-unit tray, the cards indicating the genera in each 
unit drawer, and the card catalogue of species contained in the collection with 
reference to the case and drawer in which they may be found. This work, now 
that the registration of the species and data is safely completed, involves com- 
paratively little difficulty and no more than the ordinary care required in 
handling any part of the study collection, 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 47 


Doctor Dall completed a work on the mollusks and brachiopods 
collected by the Bureau of Fisheries steamer Albatross in the eastern 
Pacific Ocean under the supervision of Dr. Alexander Agassiz, and 
also several papers on new mollusks obtained by the steamer Alba- 
tross in 1906 and by correspondents on the Pacific coast. The paper 
on Pyramidellids: by Doctor Dall and Doctor Bartsch, mentioned in 
the report of last year, was printed and distributed. 

Marine invertebrates.—In the divison bearing this title, which com- 
prises the several groups of invertebrate animals other than insects 
and mollusks, an especially noteworthy event was the receipt from 
Prof. A. E. Verrill, of Yale University, of the greater part of the col- 
lection which has been in his custody for the past twenty years and 
more. As explained in the last report, this material was mainly 
derived from the marine explorations of the U. S. Fish Commission 
on the New England coast between IS7L and 1887, and represented 
all classes of marine invertebrates. Its study and description were 
intrusted to Professor Verrill, who was to receive the first set of dupli- 
cates for his services in leu of a salary. His investigations are still 
incomplete, and the division of specimens effected during the year 
was chiefly confined to those that had been named. The two assistant 
curators of the divison were kept fully oecupied with this work at 
New Haven from April to November, 1907, and the sorting and 
arrangement of the specimens after their return extended through 
several months. The transfer of this material to Washington has 
enriched the collections in both this division and that of mollusks 
to a remarkable extent. The records show that the number of speci- 
mens received was about 73,000, comprised in 18,315 lots, while 654 
species, of which 191 are mollusks, were added to those previously 
received from the investigations of the Fish Commission. In this 
latter number are included the types or cotypes of 355 species, of which 
176 are mollusks. To simply label and record this vast collection 
required the services of two expert cataloguers for seven and one-half 
months. 

The Bureau of Fisheries transmitted large numbers of holothu- 
rians, sea urchins, starfishes, crinoids, and corals from the Hawatian 
Islands, Alaska, California, and the northwestern Pacific Ocean, and 
parasitic copepods and annelids from Japan. Among these were the 
type specimens of many new species. A collection of Japanese cri- 
noids, containing 131 specimens and the types of three new species, 
was purchased of Mr. Alan Owston and deposited in the Museum by 
the Honorable Frank Springer, of Las Vegas, New Mexico. Ninety- 
five specimens of crinoids, representing 15 species, were obtained 
from the Museum of Comparative Zoology in exchange, and 41 
specimens of isopods, comprising 13 species, from East Africa and 


82065—09—4 


48 REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


the Antarctic Ocean were presented by the Museum of Natural His- 
tory of Paris, through Prof. E. L. Bouvier. 

The absence of the assistant curators in New Haven for so long a 
period greatly curtailed the amount of scientific work accomplished. 
Two papers descriptive of fossil crabs from California and fresh- 
water crabs from Kast Africa were prepared by Miss M. J. Rathbun. 
Work on the isopods was continued by Dr. Harriet Richardson, who, 
besides identifying the specimens returned from New Haven, de- 
scribed the species Letdya distorta from Bermuda and reported on a 
second lot of isopods from the Antarctic Ocean, collected by the 
French Charcot expedition. Mr. Austin H. Clark, of the Bureau of 
Fisheries, continued work in the laboratory of the division on a me- 
moir covering the general collection of crinoids, and also completed 
for publication 5 special papers on the group. Dr. Walter K. Fisher, 
of Stanford University, spent about four months at the Museum and 
visited the Museum of Comparative Zoology and the Yale University 
Museum for the purpose of examining type specimens and literature 
in connection with the report which he is preparing on the Museum 
collection of Pacific starfishes sent him a year ago. 

About 2,900 lots of marine invertebrates were sent to 18 specialists 
for study and identification, mainly as follows: The entire collection 
of sessile barnacles, comprising 1,202 lots, to Dr. H. O. Pilsbry, of 
Philadelphia, who will report on the group for publication by the 
Museum; 711 lots of ophiurans to Dr. H. L. Clark, of the Museum 
of Comparative Zoology, for use in the preparation of a work on the 
ophiurans of the Pacific Ocean north of latitude 385° N.; 141 lots of 
meduse and 184 lots of plankton containing meduswe from the Pacific 
Ocean, to Dr. H. B. Bigelow, of the same museum; and 211 vials of 
larval crustaceans from the New England coast, to Dr. R. P. Bigelow, 
of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The pedate holo- 
thurians which have been in the possession of Prof. C. L. Edwards, 
of Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut, except the specimens of 
the genus Cucumaria on which he is still at work, have been returned 
to the Museum. 

The helminthological collection, in charge of Dr. Ch. Wardwell 
Stiles, of the Public Health and Marine-Hospital Service, and Dr. 
B. H. Ransom, of the Bureau of Animal Industry, has attained a 
position of much practical importance, since it now contains a large 
amount of material resulting from government investigations on 
the diseases of man and of wild and domestic animals. The speci- 
mens have been mainly obtained through the two bureaus mentioned 
and the Bureau of Fisheries. The additions from the Marine-Hos- 
pital Service during the year included specimens obtained during the 
plague investigation in San Francisco; from Manila, forwarded by 
Asst. Surg. P, E. Garrison, U. 8. Navy, and from physicians in 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 49 


different parts of the country. The most important contribution was 
Sparganum proliferum, a parasite of man, sent by Dr. H. Gates, of 
Manatee, Florida. The Bureau of Animal Industry supplied a large 
variety of parasites from different parts of the United States, the 
island possessions, India, China, Anam, Canada, Mexico, and Pana- 
ma. Many specimens were also obtained at autopsies of animals 
which had died at the Nationa! Zoological Park. 

Of investigations bearing more or less directly on the collections 
in the Museum, it may be said that the studies by Doctor Stiles have 
related chiefly to the question of child labor in the South as influenced 
by the presence of the hookworm disease. He described the Spar- 
ganum proliferum, above mentioned, and reexamined the original 
specimens of Filaria restiformis Leidy (1880), which he finds not to 
belong to the genus /i/aria but to be a member of the family Mer- 
mithide. In conjunction with Dr. Joseph Goldberger, he published 
on two new species of trematodes, Homalogaster philippinensis 
from the Philippine Islands, and A gamodistomum namus from Africa, 
and on a reexamination of the original specimen of 7'wnia saginata 
abietina. These two authors have also completed a manuscript on a 
number of trematodes of the family Paramphistomide. Doctor 
Ransom continued researches on the nematodes parasitic in ruminants, 
and, on the basis of Museum material, described the following new 
species: Trichostrongylus capricola, Ostertagia trifurcata, O. mar- 
shalli, O. occidentalis, and Cooperia pectinata, all from America. 
The genera Ostertagia and Cooperia are also new. A new species of 
tape worm, Cettotenia mosaica, from rabbits in California, was de- 
scribed by Mr. M. C. Hall, of the Bureau of Animal Industry. 

Comparative anatomy.—sSeveral thousand entries of skeletons in 
the mammal record books were incorporated in the osteological cata- 
logue. A complete card catalogue of the skulls and skeletons of 
turtles was made, and this collection was relabeled and arranged in 
pasteboard boxes. It became necessary to remove the material which 
had been stored behind the wall cases in the south hall, in order to 
permit of fireproofing. A large series of rough skeletons stored in 
one of the ‘outside buildings, including large numbers of the bones 
of East Indian nammals and birds presented by Doctor Abbott, was 
listed, transferred to specially made metal boxes, and placed in the 
Museum building for greater safety. The three large skeletons of 

Saird’s beaked whale in the possession of the Museum were brought 
together and measured, and one selected to mount for the exhibition 
series, as elsewhere described. 

Plants—-The total tuimber of plants received during the year was 
about 25,000. The adilitions from the U. 8S. Department of Agri- 
culture comprised 2,458 specimens from the Bureau of Plant Indus- 
try, 919 from the Forest Service, 247 from the Biological Survey, 


50 REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


and 88 from the Office of Experiment Stations. Among the pur- 
chases were 305 Mexican plants from Dr. C. G. Pringle and 769 from 
Dr. Edward Palmer, 400 Guatemalan plants from Baron Henry von 
Turckheim, 499 Californian plants from Mr. A. A. Heller, and 544 
plants of the northeastern United States and Canada from Mr. M. I. 
Fernald, Mr. W. W. Eggleston, Mr. J. Macoun, and Mr. W. H. 
Blanchard. The herbarium of Mr. J. W. Toumey, containing 887 
specimens of cacti and many types, was also purchased. The princi- 
pal acquisitions of American plants by exchange consisted of about 
2,000 specimens, including many from the West Indies and some 
living specimens of cacti and Crassulacee, from the New York 
Sotanical Garden; 636 Texan plants collected by Lindheimer, one of 
the older American botanists, from the Missouri Botanical Garden 3 
206 specimens from Indiana and Illinois, from Mr. V. TH. Chase ; 349 
specimens from Nevada, from Mr. P. B. Kennedy: 300 specimens 
from Illinois and Wisconsin, from Mr. F. C. Gates; and 280 speci- 
mens from Guatemala, from the Ohio State University. The foreign 
exchanges were mainly conducted with the Royal Botanical Museum, 
Berlin; the University of Lausanne, Switzerland; and the Albany 
Museum, Grahamstown, South Africa. The associate curator, Dr. 
J. N. Rose, collected about 2,000 dried specimens and 500° living 
plants while engaged in field work in the southwestern United States 
and northern Mexico. 

The rearrangement of the herbarium on the system of Engler and 
Prantl was completed during the year. The genera of flowering 
plants have been given serial numbers corresponding with those of 
Della Torre and Harm’s Genera Siphonogamarum, and an alpha- 
betical reference card catalogue of this work was prepared. There 
were stamped and incorporated in the permanent series 12,379 speci- 
mens, making the total number so disposed of since the return of 
the herbarium to the Museum 332,361. The number of specimens 
mounted was 10,336. The additions to the stack consisted of 15 
wooden unit cases, 3 half-unit cases and 1 steel case, comprising 420 
pigeonholes and increasing the total number of the latter in use to 
10.858. 

The investigations conducted were mainly in continuation of those 
of the previous year—Dr. J. N. Rose on the cacti, Mr. W. R. Maxon 
on ferns, Mr. E. S. Steele on the genus Laciniaria, and Mr. J. H. 
Painter on water lilies. Mr. Maxon, on the invitation of the director 
of the New York Botanical Garden, edited the manuscript on ferns 
left by the late Dr. L. M. Underwood. The director and three other 
botanists of the New York Botanical Garden spent some time at the 
herbarium, Dr. N. L. Britton working with Doctor Rose on the 
eacti, Dr. J. K. Small examining material in the preparation of a 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. bl 


work on the flora of North America, Dr. P. A. Rydberg studying 
the Rosacew and Mr. Percy Wilson the Rutacew. The desert plants 
of the southwestern United States were the subject of investigation 
by Doctor and Mrs. Volney Spaulding, of Tucson, Arizona, and 
plants of California by Miss Alice Eastwood, of the California 
Academy of Sciences. Mr. W. W. Eggleston, of Rutland, Vermont, 
made several visits to examine specimens of Crataegus. The bota- 
nists of the Department of Agriculture made constant use of the 
herbarium. 

About 2,800 specimens, the largest number since 1904, were lent 
to botanists outside of the government service, both in the United 
States and Europe. The principal sendings were as follows: One 
thousand and sixty-seven specimens of Nyctaginacee to Mr. Paul 
C. Standley, of the New Mexico College of Agriculture; 440 ferns 
of the genus Dryopteris to Mr. C. Christensen, of the Botanical 
Museum, Copenhagen ; 190 specimens of the genus Wissadula to Prot. 
R. E. Fries, of the Botanical Museum, Upsala; and 153 specimens, 
chiefly Colombian Composite, to Dr. J. M. Greenman, of the Field 
Museum of Natural History. 


DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGY. 


The total number of geological and paleontological specimens ac- 
quired during the year was nearly 33,000, comprised in 147 accessions. 
Twenty lots of specimens were lent to investigators for study, 149 
sets of dupheates were distributed to educational establishments, and 
15 lots of duplicates were used in making exchanges. ‘Twenty-two 
papers by members of the staff and by others descriptive of material 
belonging in the department were published. They are cited in the 
bibhography. As explained elsewhere, the division of stratigraphic 
paleontology was separated into three divisions, corresponding with 
former sections, as follows: Invertebrate paleontology, vertebrate 
paleontology, and paleobotany. 

Systematic and applied geology—TVhe most important accessions 
to this division were as follows: By transfer from the U. S. Geolog- 
ical Survey, specimens of rocks from the Rockland quadrangle, 
Maine, the Austin and Brackett quadrangles, Texas, and the Redding 
quadrangle, California, and rocks and ores from the Coeur d’Alene 
district, Idaho; as gifts from Mr. Charles P. Robbins, the Southern 
Railway, and the Utah Antimony Company, respectively, examples 
of tin ores from Spokane, Washington, of copper ore from Ducktown, 
Tennessee, and of antimony ores from Utah. 

No noteworthy changes were made in either the exhibition or study 
series. The former is as extensive as the space will permit, and is 
fully catalogued and labeled. The dust occasioned by the rebuilding 
of the roofs rendered necessary the thorough cleaning and overhaul- 


ip REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908, 


ing of the exhibition and many of the storage cases. Work on the 
reserve collection has been continued and been brought well up to 
date, some 3,390 cards and labels having been prepared. 

Dr. George P. Merrill, head curator of the department, made an 
extensive study of Meteor Crater, Canyon Diablo, which he began by 
a visit to the locality in May, 1907, under a grant from the Smith- 
sonian Institution. THis investigations tend to show that the crater 
was formed, not by voleanic explosion, but by impact, and presuma- 
bly from that of a giant meteorite. The results so far obtained have 
been published. 

Mineralogy.—Among the more valuable additions to the collection 
of minerals were specimens of the rare zeolite, edingtonite, from 
Bolet, Sweden, and of the rare calcium copper vanadate, calciovol- 
vorthite, from Paradox Valley, Colorado; a fine crystal of tapiolite, 
a columbo-tantalate, from Chanteloube, France; an excellent exam- 
ple of hydromagnesite from Alameda County, California; and speci- 
mens of meteoric iron from Williamstown, Kentucky; Ainsworth, 
Nebraska: and Crab Orchard, Rockwood County, Tennessee. The 
meteors were in part presented by Mr. E. EK. Howell, of Washington. 

The condition of the reserve collection has been much improved 
through the identification of many specimens and the writing of 
several thousand labels and catalogue cards. The exhibition collec- 
tion has been maintained in good condition, and a new series of de- 
scriptive labels is in course of preparation. 

Mr. Wirt Tassin, assistant curator of mineralogy, aided in the 
study of the materials from Meteor Crater, and made ten analyses 
of meteoric chromites, which represent over 65 per cent of the knewn 
analyses. Ife also investigated the minerals contained in certain 
sands from the vicinity of Norris, Montana, which resulted 1m the 
discovery of the rare thorium-uranium mineral, thorianite, and also 
of xenotime, zircon, monazite, and spinel. Numerous demands were 
made upon this division for chemical examinations for other branches 
of the Museum. 

Tnvertebrate paleontology.—Among the accessions received by this 
division were several of exceptional importance. The Smithsonian 
Institution made two very noteworthy deposits. The first consisted 
of the celebrated Gustav Hambach collection of fossil invertebrates, 
together with some specimens of fossil plants and vertebrate remains, 
containing many types and a number of specimens from the Prout 
and Shumard collections which for years were supposed to be lost. 
The second was the Gilbert collection of Niagaran fossils from north- 
ern Indiana, which formed the basis of Doctor Kindle’s studies on 
the subject, and, owing to the scarcity of fossil-vielding localities in 
this region and the number of types represented, is unique and prac- 
tically impossible of duplication. Much material was transmitted by 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 53 


the U. 8. Geological Survey, the largest and most valuable series 
comprising 20 drawers of Paleozoic graptolites, the study of which 
had recently been completed for publication by Dr. Rudolph Ruede- 
mann, of the New York Geological Survey. Among the types de- 
scribed were some presented to the Museum by the University of 
Colorado. Through the medium of exchange about 2,500 specimens, 
representing 419 species, of European Paleozoic trilobites and 
brachiopods were received from Dr. F. Krantz, of Bonn, Germany ; 
470 species of various groups from Mr. J. Vaquez, of Pantin, France ; 
and 500 specimens of Tennessee Ordovician fossils from Mr. Manly 
D. Barber, of Knoxville. A fine slab of Uintacrinus, deposited by 
the Hon. Frank Springer and described in a paper soon to be pub- 
lished, constituted a most important addition to the exhibition series. 

The Smithsonian field party, under Secretary Charles D. Walcott, 
which made extensive geological explorations in British Columbia 
and Idaho during the summer of 1907, brought back important col- 
lections of Cambrian fossils, the study of which is being conducted 
by Doctor Walcott. Dr. R. S. Bassler, curator of the division, spent 
a part of July and August, 1907, in making collections especially 
from Niagaran strata in western Tennessee. During September 
and a part of the following May and June he was detailed to con- 
duct investigations in Virginia under the U. S. Geological Survey. 
A general study of the Niagaran rocks of the Mississippi Valley 
occupied his attention during the last three weeks of June. Some 
5,000 specimens of fossil invertebrates were secured during these 
surveys. 

Work on the Springer collection was continued, and the Gilbert 
and Nettelroth collections were recorded and installed, the total num- 
ber of specimens catalogued being 17,668. Two hundred and fifty- 
nine standard drawers and 110 boxes of unworked material were 
removed from storage and their contents placed in condition for 
examination. The Hambach collection was unpacked and arranged, 
but the specimens have not yet been catalogued. Doctor Bassler 
completed studies on the Nettelroth collection, the formation of 
geodes, the Niagaran strata of west Tennessee, a revision of the 
Beyrichiide, the cement materials of western Virginia, and the 
lower Devonian Ostracoda and Bryozoa of Maryland. He also con- 
tinued his work on the American Cambrian Ostracoda. 

Vertebrate paleontology.—The most notable accession in vertebrate 
paleontology was one received from the American Museum of Nat- 
ural History in partial exchange for the Cope collection, as arranged 
some time ago. It contains many rare species from various horizons 
in the United States and South America. Of primary interest are a 
fine skull, including the jaws, of Uintatherium, several good speci- 
mens.of Oligocene mammals, and many rare Eocene mammals. The 


54 REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


Gustav Hambach collection included a number of fossil fishes, rep- 
tiles, and mammals. The collection obtained by Mr. C. W. Gilmore 
on the Smithsonian expedition to Alaska during the summer of 
1907 and deposited in the Museum contains several fragmentary 
specimens representing fossil species of the mastodon, bison, musk ox, 
caribou, beaver, ete. The most important find was a nearly complete 
skull of a new species of Ovébos, which Mr. Gidley has described 
under the name Ov/hos yuhonensis. A fossil turtle from the Kansas 
chalk is also worthy of mention. 

The Teleoceras remains, so extensively represented in the Marsh 
collection, have been completely overhauled and cleaned, and from 
them has been selected sufficient material for the purposes of the Na- 
tional Museum, together with a fine lot of duplicates for exchange. 
This work was greatly delayed by Mr. Gilmore’s absence in Alaska 
and the time subsequently consumed in the writing of his report. 
Aside from the above, Mr. Gilmore has devoted his attention mainly 
to the preparation of Camptosaurian material, which has progressed 
as rapidly as could be expected, and he feels confident of beimg able 
to mount one and perhaps two fairly complete exhibition specimens. 
The working out of the very large collection of Stegosaurian material 
has also been begun.’ Some 2,500 catalogue cards were prepared. 

Mr. J. W. Gidley has studied and described the Miocene and Plio- 
cene horses of North America, two new species of Pleistocene 
ruminants, a new species of fossil deer from the Mascall formation 
of Oregon, a new species of multi-tuberculate mammal, a new species 
of Eocene mammal, a new species of Orbos, the position and mechan- 
ics of limb and foot structure of sundry small mammals, and a small 
collection of fossil mammals from the Miocene of Nevada. 

There are now cleaned and ready for mounting skeletons of a small- 
horned rodent, “pigaulus hatcher/, from Kansas; a creodont mam- 
mal, Sinopa, from the Bridger Basin of Wyoming; a shortlimbed 
rhinoceros, Teleoceras fossiger, from Kansas; two species of the 
Jurassic reptile, Camptosaurus; a fossil cetacean, Zeuglodon cetloides ; 
at least one 7itanotherium, and a Lower Eocene carnivore, /fop- 
lophonius. The type specimen of Ceratosaurus nasicornis can also 
be prepared for mounting in relief with a comparatively small 
amount of labor. In addition, it is expected that in another year or 
eighteen months the work of cleaning the bones of Stegosaurus unqu- 
latus, a reptilian form ranking in grotesque character with the 
Triceratops, will be completed. 

Paleobotany.—The principal accession in this division consisted 
of about 235 specimens of fossil plants, forming a part of the Gustav 
Hambach collection, previously referred to. It contaims 16 types 
from Florissant, Colorado, described by W. C. G. Kirchner in the 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 55 


Transactions of the St. Louis Academy of Science, Volume VIII, 
1898. The entire exhibition and a large part of the study series were 
overhauled, partly rearranged, and many of the specimens reduced 
in size by careful trimming. Much progress was made in the num- 
bering of specimens and the preparation of the card catalogue. The 
investigations carried on were almost entirely limited to the work 
of the paleobotanists of the Geological Survey. Dr. A. C. Peale was 
detailed for service in connection with the explorations of the 
Geological Survey in Montana during the summer of 1907. 


DISTRIBUTION AND EXCHANGE OF SPECIMENS. 


Of the regular sets of duplicate specimens prepared for educa- 
tional purposes 152 were distributed during the year, as follows: 
Sixty-one of nonmetallic minerals and ores, 53 of fossil invertebrates, 
24 of rocks, 8 of minerals, 3 of weathered rocks, and 3 of marine 
invertebrates. The total number of specimens included in these sets 
was 8471, besides which nearly 3,500 specimens were sent out in 
special sets. 

Including the material to be worked up for publication by the 
Museum, there were placed in the hands of specialists not officially 
connected with it, for study, 6,215 specimens from the department of 
biology, 2,844 from the department of geology, and 29 from the 
department of anthropology, a total of 9,088 specimens. 

In carrying on exchanges with scientific institutions and indi- 
viduals 13,993 duplicate specimens were used. Of this number 1,630 
were geological, 153 anthropological, and 12,210 zoological and 
botanical. An idea of the extent of the Museum’s relations im this 
regard may be obtained from the following list of establishments and 
individuals abroad with which exchanges were made during the 
year. Among the establishments were the British Museum of Natural 
History, London, the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, and the Hancock 
Museum, Neweastle-upon-Tyne, England; the Museum of Natural 
History, Elbeuf, France; the Koniglisches Botanisches Museum, the 
Kéniglisches Zoologisches Museum, Berlin, and the Stadtisches 
Museum fiir Vélkerkunde, Leipzig, Germany; the Jardin Botanique 
de VEtat, Brussels, Belgium: the Zoological Museum, Copenhagen, 
Denmark: the Naturhistoriska Riksmuseum, Stockholm, Sweden: 
Teyler’s Museum, Haarlem, Netherlands; Botanical Museum of the 
University of Lausanne, Switzerland; the Royal Zoological Museum, 
Turin, Italy; Royal Museum of Natural History, Vienna, Austria; 
the Hungarian National Museum, Budapest, Hungary; the Royal 
Botanic Garden, Calcutta, India; the Albany Museum, Grahams- 
town, Cape Colony, South Africa; the Waihi School of Mines, Auck- 
land, New Zealand; the Instituto de Manguinhos, Rio de Janeiro, 


56 REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


and the Instituto Serumtherapico do Estado de Sao Paulo, Brazil; 
the Hope Gardens, Kingsfon, Jamaica; Queen’s University, Kings- 
ton, Canada; and the Estacion Central Agronémica, Santiago de las 
Vegas, Cuba. 

Among the individuals may be mentioned: Mr. Edward Lovett, 
Croydon, England; Mr. Henri Douville, Paris, Mr. A. Duchaussoy, 
Caudebee lés Elbeuf, Seine Inférieure, and Mr. J. Vaquez, Perreux, 
Seine, France; Dr. I’. S. Archenhold, Treptow-Sternwarte, Trep- 
tow bei Berlin, Mr. A. Kneucker, Karlsruhe, Mr. F. Krantz, Bonn, 
and Mar. Curt Morhart, Ensfield, Middle Franconia, Germany; Mr. 
O. M. Reuter, Abo. Finland; Mr. Robert E. Fries, Stockholm, 
Sweden; Mar. Friedrich Hendel, Vienna, Austria; Mr. Michele Gua- 
daeno and Mr. Ernesto Monaco, Naples, Italy; Dr. Casimir de 
Candolle, Geneva, and Ma. Henry Volkart, St. Gallen, Switzerland; 
Mr. F. Baker, Richmond, Victoria, and Mr. W. H. D. Le Souéf, 
Melbourne, Australia; Dr. Eugenio F. Giacornelli, La Rioja, Ar- 
gentina, and Senor Juan Tremoleras, Montevideo, Uruguay, South 
America; Dr. Carlos Renson, San Salvador, Central America; Mr. 
Luis Brooks, Santiago, Cuba. 


MISCELLANEOUS. 
VISITORS. 


The number of visitors” to the National Museum building during 
the vear 1907-8 was 299,659, a daily average of 954, and to the Suuth- 
sonian building, 237,182, a daily average of 755. 

The following tables show, respectively, the attendance during 
ach month of the past year, and for each year beginning with 1581, 
when the Museum building was first opened to the public. 


Number of visitors during the fiscal year 1907-8. 


Q } _ |i Ss j a 

Year and month. peeaion aie Year and month. ne pec 
*"* pbuilding. | 5° | building. 

— “|| 
1907. 1908, 

bo, eee ¢ Ree NRO ih Ae, 28,790 01 296)'|| VANUSTY -ccpeces: «a seeaaa sae 13, 994 9, 788 
Wren. bss dws od Soe da aan 52, 343 $0,204" || PSWTNALY s2s.-cnateenseess 13, 606 9, 262 
Bante Er, ch... vac vaeneaed es 46,135 | 39,861 || March ........... Sy ceria | 18,700} 18,926 
8 te) 1 ee ee 83.784 | 20,882 || April........-.--sseseeeeeeee 27, 698 21, 248 
November.......2.esesseee-- 18,860 | 17,248 || May.........-.----ececeseeee ~ 17,307) 13,590 
December ..............----- 13, S96 10/804) | Mune Succewsvc seoeseccees cee 14, 546 10, 988 
| TOthl 2s52ccctcestaates 299, 659 237, 182 


«These figures are based on an attendance during 314 days in the year, on which the 
buildings were open to the public. 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


Number of visitors to the Museum and Smithsonian buildings since the 


of the former in 1881. 


57 


OpCniing 


smith- || smith- 
Year Museum | Sonian_ | Year, Museum | Sonian 
building.) ©* | building. 
1 Cee 150,000 | 100,000 || 1895-96 .......2..22..22--200- 180,505 | 108, 650 
HGSvateecck 222 ca ssnceeeaeee: | 167,455 | 152,744 WEBDG 8 hac scene arnscedtsae 229,606 | 115, 709 
1G A oe 202,188 | 104,823 || 1897-98 ........-.....-------- 177, 254 99, 278 
1884 (half year)............ .| 97,661 | 45,565 |} 1898-99 ......22......2.022--- 192,471 116, 912 
WSS4-BD. ooo cee sce mecwnwcenca 205, 026 105, 993 | DB 1 OOS care 5 Griote niece ciao =) =f 225, 440 33, 147 
11 Gl ee | 174) 225.| 88,960 |} 1900-1901 .................-.. 216,556 | 151,563 
IBS =B IG ceee aac tetcinntsccceee: B16; 02") /98)562)'|| WOOL)... 5. 2.2504 sedee tee: 173,888 | 144, 107 
1S AC eee ree ee 249,665 | 102,863 || 1902-8. .................---- | 315,307 181, 174 
(EC ee ee 374,843 | 149,618 || 1903-4 .....2.22.2...-0ee eee 220,778 | 148, 988 
esac see 1 See h Ages ans DARA IDOE G04 |e O04 Gian: sa eeee Sateen e aee 235, 921 149, 380 
1S QUO Meee ee ee i S BEG A20 0) ssl G09!) L056 2s msec eee ace esemiee 210, 886 149, 661 
BOT 0 Die a ete San adie sia DAA F975 | at ELL [ fag S10 sy eg ee | 210, 107 153, 591 
(GSP RCE eee | BIG G30) |) TA, A883 ||, WOUVES seee ce cen Ss ater etelae | 299,659 | 237, 182 
UES ee eres | 195,748 | 103, 910 6, 274, 000 | 3,559, 5.1 
St) 20a eee eee 201,744 | 105,658 || 


CONGRESSES AND MEETINGS. 


The Seventh International Zoological Congress was held in Boston, 
Massachusetts, from August 19 to 23, 1907, under the presidency of 
Dr. Alexander Agassiz. The Smithsonian Institution was officially 
represented by Dr. Theodore Gill, Dr. William Hl. Dall, and Dr. 
Richard Rathbun, and the National Museum by Dr. Frederick W. 
True, head curator of biology, Dr. Leonhard Stejneger, curator of 
reptiles and batrachians, and Dr. Harrison G. Dyar, of the division 
of insects. Several papers were read by members of the Museum 
staff, as follows: Dr. L. O. Howard, curator of insects, The recent 
progress and present condition of economic entomology; Doctor 
True, On the correlation of North American and European genera 
of fossil cetaceans; Doctor Gill, Systematic zoology, its place and 
functions, and The incongruity of inland and marine faunas; 
Doctor Dyar, The distribution of mosquitoes in North America; 
Dr. Marcus W. Lyon, jr., assistant curator of mammals, The dis- 
tribution of bats in the zoogeographical regions; Dr. B. W. Ever- 
mann, curator of fishes, The origin of the golden trout of the 
Southern High Sierra; Doctor Dall, curator of mollusks, Deep 
sea distribution of the molluscan fauna of the northwest coast; Dr. 
Paul Bartsch, assistant curator of mollusks, A study in distribution 
based on the family Pyramidellide of the west coast of America; 
Dr. T. W. Vaughan, custodian of madreporarian corals, Summary 
of results obtained from a study of the recent Madreporaria of the 
Hawaiian Islands and Laysan. Organizing secretaries were selected 
from members of the staff, as follows: Dr. Leonhard Stejneger for 


58 REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


the section of zoogeography, Dr. L. O. Howard for the section of 
entomology, and Dr. Ch. Wardell Stiles, custodian of the helmintho- 
logical collections, for the section of apphed zoology. 

After the close of the meeting in Boston many members of the Con- 
gress, especially from abroad, were entertained at other places, and 
among them Washington, which they visited during the 3d, 4th, and 
5th of September. The Museum building was opened for their 
private inspection on the last evening, when an informal reception 
was also tendered them by the Smithsonian Institution. 

Dr. Paul Haupt, associate in historic archeology, will represent 
the National Museum at the Fifteenth International Congress of 
Orientalists, to be held in Copenhagen, Denmark, in August, 1908. 
Dr. Arnold Hague, of the U. S. Geological Survey, has also been 
appomted to serve in a like capacity at the centenary celebration of 
the Geological Society of London, which will take place in Sep- 
tember, 1908. 

Accommodations in the Smithsonian building were accorded to 
the National Academy of Sciences for the business sessions of the 
annual meeting, from April 21 to 23, 1908, while one of the exhibi- 
tion halls in the Museum building was especially fitted up for the 
open sessions, at which many scientific papers were read. 


CORRESPONDENCE, 


The correspondence of the Museum is increasing each year, since, 
besides its relations with practically all of the scientific and many of 
the art establishments throughout the world, the Museum is called 
upon by the public generally for the identification of specimens and 
the answering of inquiries. As would naturally be expected from the 
character of the requests, this work encroaches heavily upon the time 
of the scientific staff, on which dependence must be had for the in- 
formation required. The number of specimens received for identifi- 
cation amounts to several thousand every year. 

The office of correspondence also attends to the distribution of 
the publications of the Museum, of which about 50,000 copies of vol- 
umes end separates were sent out during the year to institutions and 
individuals on the regular mailing list and about 10,000 copies in 
compliance with special requests. 


PUBLICATIONS. 


There were issued by the Museum during the past year 8 volumes 
and 6 parts of volumes. The Annual Report for 1907, published in 
December, was restricted, like those of the two preceding years, to 
an administrative statement of the operations of the Museum. Vol- 
ume 32 of the Proceedings, issued in July, 1907, contained 51 papers, 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 59 


all of which had been previously distributed in the form of sep- 
arates. In June, 1908, volume 33 of the Proceedings, containing 35 
papers, was published, 700 copies of each paper being delivered in 
pamphlet form, instead of 600, as in previous years. This increase 
will allow a somewhat wider distribution than heretofore. In addi- 
tion to those already mentioned, 23 “ separates,” forming part of 
volume 34 of the Proceedings, were published and distributed during 
the year. 

Of bulletins, 5 volumes were issued, as follows: No. 50, volume 4, 
Birds of North and Middle America, by Robert Ridgway, containing 
973 pages of text and 34 plates, and descriptive of the thrushes, wren- 
thrushes, mockingbirds, starlings, weaver-birds, larks, sharpbills, 
tyrant flycatchers, manakins, and chatterers; No. 58, The Herpetology 
of Japan and Adjacent Territory, by Leonhard Stejneger; No. 59, Re- 
cent Madreporaria of the Hawaiian Islands and Laysan, by T. Way- 
land Vaughan; No. 60, The Barnacles (Cirripedia) Contained in the 
Collections of the U. S. National Museum, by Henry A. Pilsbry, of 
the Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences; and No. 61, Varia- 
tions and Genetic Relationships of the Garter Snakes, by Alexander 
C. Ruthven, of the University of Michigan. 

The * parts” of volumes consisted of the following numbers in the 
series of Contributions from the U. S. National Herbarium: Volume 
X, part 5, Report on the Diatoms of the Albatross Voyages in the 
Pacific Ocean, 1888-1904, by Albert Mann, of the U.S. Department of 
Agriculture: Volume X, part 6, The Cyperacese of Costa Rica, by 
the late Prof. C. B. Clarke; Volume X, part 7, Studies of Tropica! 
American Ferns, No. 1, by William R. Maxon; Volume XII, part 1, 
Catalogue of the botanical library of John Donnell Smith, presented 
in 1905 to the Smithsonian Institution, compiled by Alice Cary At- 
wood; Volume XII, part 2, containing The Lecythidacee of Costa 
tica, and Tonduzia, a New Genus of Apoeyvnacee from Central 
America, by H. Pittier de Fabrega; and A Collection of Plants from 
the Vicinity of La Guaira, Venezuela, by J. R. Johnston; Volume 
XII, part 3, Types of American Grasses, by A. S. Hitchcock. 

In addition to the foregoing, 17 papers describing Museum mate- 
rial, and for the most part written by members of its staff, were pub- 
lished in the Quarterly Issue of the Smithsonian Miscellaneous Col- 
lections. They may be classified as follows: Archeology, 1; mam- 
mals, 1; fishes, 1; insects, 1; marine invertebrates, including mollusks, 
4; botany, 4; geology, 5. The Secretary also granted permission Zor 
the printing elsewhere than in the publications of the Institution and 
Museum of 10 papers by members of the staff. 

The following is a classification by subjects of the 230 papers cited 
in the bibliography: Administration, 1; ethnology, 5; archeology, 3; 


60 REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


physical anthropology, 1; mammals, 22; birds, 11; reptiles and batra- 
chians, 8; fishes, 25; insects, 41; mollusks, 24; other marine inverte- 
brates, 42; helminthology, 9; plants, 12; geology and mineralogy, 6; 
fossils, 14; fine arts, 1; biography, 3; bibliography, 2. 

In addition to the editorial work in connection with the publica- 
tions, the editor also has charge of the other printing for the Museum, 
including labels, blanks, ete., and of the binding, all of which is done 
by the Government Printing Office. 


LIBRARY, 


The Museum library has continued to receive from Prof. O. T. 
Mason and Dr. C. A. White many gifts of scientific publications 
which are of great value in completing sets and filling in the series 
of authors’ separates, and Mr. William Schaus has again added ma- 
terially to the sectional library of the division of insects. Dr. Charles 
W. Richmond has presented another installment of books and pamph- 
lets, including many of the Thunberg dissertations, which are for the 
most part rare and difficult to obtain and of which he is endeavoring 
to complete the set. The library has also been benefited by the plan 
adopted by the International Catalogue of Scientific Literature of 
sending to authors lists of their scientific writings that have been 
entered in the catalogue and requesting any that have not been cited, 
Whereby many separates from periodicals, journals, ete., have been 
acquired, 

There are now in the library 33,564 volumes, 52,112 unbound papers, 
and LOS manuscripts. The additions during the year consisted of 
3,257 books, 4470 pamphlets, and 247 parts of volumes. One thou- 
sand books, 2.257 complete volumes of periodicals, and 4,056 pamph- 
lets were catalogued, and 1,086 books were sent to the Government 
Printing Office for binding. The number of books, periodicals, and 
pamphlets borrowed from the general library was 29,242, while the 
number assigned to sectional libraries was 10314. 


PHOTOGRAPHY. 


The photographie laboratory, which is one of the best equipped for 
its purpose in the country, has for its object the preparation of illus- 
trations for the publications of the Museum, for the manuscript 
records of important collections, and for the exhibition halls, and of 
copies of plans relating to details of construction in connection with 
the buildings, furniture, ete. The number of negatives made during 
the year was 1,328; of silver and velox prints, 3,615; of blueprints, 
6447; and of bromide enlargements, 28. Seventy-four rolls of films 
taken in the field were also developed. 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 61 


EXPOSITIONS. 


Jamestown Ter-Centennial Hxaposition—tThe participation by the 
Smithsonian Institution and National Museum in the Jamestown 
Exposition, which opened on April 26, 1907, was outlined in the last 
report. The exhibit, prepared and maintained under the direction 
of Mr. W. de C. Ravenel, who represented these establishments on 
the government board, was, in accordance with the act of Congress, 
designed to illustrate the aboriginal, colonial, and national history 
of America, and, notwithstanding the small allotment granted, it 
proved an especially noteworthy feature. Although the exposition 
closed on November 30, the dismantling of the exhibits was, by direc- 
tion of the President, deferred until January 18, 1908, but by Febru- 
ary 10 all the objects belonging to the Institution and Museum had 
been shipped to Washington. 

Besides the material taken from the existing collections, many addi- 
tional groups and objects were specially prepared or purchased for 
the exposition, and these have since been incorporated in the collec- 
tions of the Museum. Among them was a group of 14 white and 
Indian figures representing a trading expedition by Capt. John 
Smith at the mouth of the James River in 1607, designed by Mr, 
William H. Holmes, and executed under his direction by Mr. H. W. 
Hendley and Mr. U.S. J. Dunbar. Another exhibit, prepared under 
the supervision of Dr. James M. Flint, U. S. Navy, curator of medi- 
cine, was a collection illustrative of the history of medicine in 
America by means of photographs of distinguished medical men, 
with information regarding their achievements, from the physician 
who accompanied Captain Smith to America to Dr. Carlos Finlay, 
who is credited with having first formulated a definite theory as to 
the transmission of yellow fever by the mosquito. 

The other more important acquisitions from the same source were 
as follows: One hundred and thirty-three enlarged colored photo- 
graphs of individuals who have attained prominence in connection 
with the history of America; 17 enlarged colored photographs from 
colored drawings made by John White for Sir Walter Raleigh in 1585; 
48 engravings, paintings, and photographs of historic scenes and land- 
marks; 27 enlarged photographs illustrating the history of the Capi- 
tol; 4 groups of two figures each, representing by costumes of the 
colonial period the nations most prominent in the settlement of 
America; a model of John Stevens’s side-wheel steamboat, the Phoe- 
nix; a model of the side-wheel steamship Savannah; a model of an 
American Indian travois; a primitive sled; a number of the gold coins 
of the United States: and a fine color photograph from a painting, by 
Miley & Sons, of Lexington, Va. A number of cases and other pieces 
of furniture, used in connection with other exhibits, were also secured 
for the Museum. 


62 REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908, 


International Maritime Eaposition, Bordeaux, France-—This ex- 
position, which was also officially opened before the close of the 
previous fiscal year, was likewise described in the last annual report. 
Of the $15,000 appropriated by Congress only about $8,000 was avail- 
ible for the preparation, installation, and maintenance of the entire 
government exhibit, which, at the request of the Secretary of State, 
was undertaken by the Smithsonian Institution and placed in charge 
of Mr. W. de C. Ravenel. Owing to delays on the part of this Gov- 
ernment, the United States pavilion was not completed and turned 
over to Mr. D. I. Murphy, American consul at Bordeaux, until late 
in June, but by expeditious methods it was made possible to admit 
the public on July 4, although the installation was not finished until 
the 20th of that month. The exposition remained open until Novem- 
ber 10, when the work of repacking the collection was immediately 
begun under the direction of Mr. F. C. Cole, of the Museum staff, who 
had assisted Mr. Ravenel in its installation. The shipment reached 
Washington in January, 1908, and the articles contributed by the 
several government departments were returned to them. A number 
of objects which had been exhibited by other participants were 
secured for the Museum. 

Aasha-Vukon-Pacific: Buposition.—Vo enable the Government to 
participate in this exposition, which will be held in Seattle, Wash- 
ington, in 1909, the sum of $600,000 was appropriated in the sundry 
civil act, approved May 27, 1908. Of this amount $200,000 was 
allotted for exhibition purposes, under the direction of a board of 
management to be appointed by the President, composed of three 
persons now in the employ of the Government. Although the board 
was not constituted until after the close of the year, it may be men- 
tioned here that Mr. Ravenel, Administrative Assistant of the 
Museum, has been designated as one of its members. The part spe- 
cifically directed to be taken by the Smithsonian Institution and 
National Museum consists in the exhibition of “such articles and 
inaterial of an historical nature as will impart a knowledge of our 
national history, especially that of Alaska, Hawaii, and the Philip- 
pine Islands, and that part of the United States west of the Rocky 
Mountains.” | 


ORGANIZATION AND STAFF. 


The only change in the matter of organization was made in the 
department of geology, where three divisions, corresponding with 
former sections, were substituted for the division of stratigraphic 
paleontology. They are as follows: Division of invertebrate paleon- 
tology, with Dr. R. S. Bassler as curator; division of vertebrate 
paleontology, with Mr. James W. Gidley as custodian of the mam- 
malian collection, and Mr. Charles W, Gilmore custodian of the 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 63 


reptilian collection; and division of paleobotany, with Mr. David 
White as associate curator. The other members of the staff con- 
nected with these divisions are given in the lst beginning on page 65. 

Furloughs without pay were granted to Dr. W. H. Ashmead, whose 
continued illness still incapacitates him for work, and to Mr. Laurence 
La Forge, aid in the division of physical and chemical geology. 
Mr. J. C. Crawford was appointed assistant curator, division of in- 
sects, to fill the vacancy caused by the transfer to the Bureau of 
Entomology of the Department of Agriculture of Dr. Harrison G. 
Dyar, who had been temporarily occupying this position. The 
latter, however, still retains the custodianship of the collection of 
Lepidoptera. Mr. A. C. Weed was made an aid in the division of 
fishes, and Mr. IK. N. Bales, a preparator in the division of physical 
anthropology. 

I regret having to record the death, on July 8,1907,o0f Dr. William 
La Grange Ralph, curator of the section of birds’ eggs,to whom the 
Museum is indebted for especially important gifts and whose services 
were mainly rendered without compensation. Doctor Ralph was 
born June 19, 1851, at Holland Patent, New York, where his early 
years were passed. In his boyhood rambles he imbibed a taste for 
natural history which had an important bearing on his after life. 
In 1863 his parents moved to Utica, where he received his preliminary 
education. He attended Whitestone Seminary, and later the College 
of Physicians and Surgeons, New York City, where he obtained the 
degree of doctor of medicine in 1879. Upon his return to Utica he 
engaged in the practice of his profession, but delicate health soon 
forced him to abandon his intention of following a medical career, 
and urged him to less exacting pursuits. He again turned his atten- 
tion to the fascinations of bird study and the wild life of the woods, 
and, having independent means, began in earnest the formation of a 
collection of birds, nests, and eggs of Oneida County. In the study 
of the local avifauna he became associated with Mr. Egbert Bage, of 
Utica, and the researches of the two naturalists resulted in the publi- 
cation of an Annotated List of the Birds of Oneida County, New 
York. (Trans. Oneida Hist. Soc., IIT, 1886, pp. 101-147). This 
was followed some years later by a supplement, entitled “Additional 
Notes on the Birds of Oneida County, New York.” (Auk, VII, 
1890, pp. 229-232). 

It was to the subject of oology that Doctor Ralph’s energies were 
chiefly directed, and his cabinet of nests and eggs, at first of not 
more than local interest, became in later years one of the most impor- 
tant private collections in the United States. His personal work in 
the field was restricted chiefly to the Adirondacks and Florida, but 
he obtained by purchase and through the employment of collectors 
many important desiderata from other parts of the country. When 


82065 


09——5 


64 REPOR!.OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


Major Bendire undertook the preparation of the Life Histories of 
North American Birds he found an enthusiastic supporter in Doctor 
Ralph, who proceeded forthwith to contribute specimens and notes 
with the object of making the undertaking a success. The two pub- 
lished volumes of the Life Histories teem with items from his pen, 
and his contributions to the Museum egg collection, begun in 1892, 
number upward of 10,000 specimens, mostly in faultless condition 
and labeled with great care. His other donations to the National 
Museum, by no means unimportant in the aggregate, include, among 
other objects, an excellent specimen of the extinct Philip Island 
parrot (Nestor productus). ! 

At the death of Major Bendire, in 1897, Doctor Ralph was chosen 
to fill the vacancy of custodian of the section of birds’ eggs, and in 
1901 his title was changed to curator. He at once proceeded to accu- 
mulate data for the continuation of the Life Histories, but owing to 
the precarious state of bis health the third volume of this work was 
incomplete at the time of hic death. Doctor Ralph exhibited a keen 
interest in the study of wild creatures, and always kept a variety of 
pets in his office. He was largely instrumental in the introduction of 
eray squirrels into the Smithsonian grounds, with the object of add- 
ing to the attractiveness of the park. Although his tenure of life 
was rendered uncertain from an early age by reason of an organic 
affection of the heart, Doctor Ralph was invariably cheerful and 
optimistic, mild mannered, and of a gentle and unselfish disposition. 
Tiis loss will be keenly felt by his friends and associates. 

Prof. W. O. Atwater, of Wesleyan University, Middletown, Con- 
necticut. who served as honorary curator in charge of the section of 
foods from 1884 to 1892, died on September 22, 1907. While con- 
nected with the Museum he prepared an interesting exhibit illustra- 
ting the composition of the human body, and another showing the 
manner in which food compensates for the daily expenditure of 
bodily tissue. 


3 


THE MUSEUM STAFF. 


[June 80, 1908S. ] 


CHarRLeS D. Watcorr, Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, Keeper er 
officio. 

Ricuarp Rarusun, Assistant Secretary, in charge of the U. S. National 
Museum. : 

W. DE C. RAVENEL, Administrative Assistant. 


SCIENTIFIC STAFF. 


DEPARTMENT OF ANTHROPOLOGY : 
Otis T. Mason, Head Curator. 
Division of Ethnology: Otis T. Mason, Curator; Walter Hough, Assistant 
Curator; J. W. Fewkes, Collaborator. 
Division of Physical Anthropology: AleS Hrdli¢ka, Assistant Curator. 
Division of Historic Archeology: Cyrus Adler, Curator; I. M. Casanowiez, 
Assistant Curator. 
Division of Prehistoric Archeology: William H. Holmes, Curator; IK. P. 
Upham, Aid; J. D. MeGuire, Collaborator. 
Division of Technology: George C. Maynard, Assistant Curator. 
Division of Graphic Arts: Paul Brockett, Custodian. 
Section of Photography: T. W. Smillie, Custodian. 
Division of Medicine: J. M. Flint, U. S. Navy (Retired), Curator. 
Division of Historic Religions: Cyrus Adler, Curator. 
Division of History: A. Howard Clark, Curator. 
Associate in Historic Archeology: Paul Haupt. 
DEPARTMENT OF BIOLOGY: 
Frederick W. ‘True, Head Curator. 
Division of Mammals: Frederick W. True, Curator; Marcus W. Lyon, jr., 
Assistant Curator. 
Division of Birds: Robert Ridgway, Curator; Charles W. Richmond, Assist- 
ant Curator; J. H. Riley, Aid. 
Division of Reptiles and Batrachians: Leonhard Stejneger, Curator; R. G. 
Paine, Aid. 
Division of Fishes: B. W. Evermann, Curator; Barton A, Bean, Assistant 
Curator; Alfred C. Weed, Aid. 
Division of Mollusks: William H. Dall, Curator; Paul Bartsch, Assistant 
Curator; William B. Marshall, Aid. 
Division of Insects: I. O. Howard, Curator; J. C. Crawford, Assistant 
Curator; H. S. Barber, Aid. 
Section of Myriapoda: O. I. Cook, Custodian. 
Section of Diptera: D. W. Coquillett, Custodian. 
Section of Coleoptera: E. A. Schwarz, Custodian. 
Section of Lepidoptera: Harrison G. Dyar, Custodian. 
Section of Orthoptera: A. N. Caudell, Custodian, 
Section of Arachnida: Nathan Banks, Custodian. 
Section of Hemiptera: Otto Heidemann, Custodian. 


66 REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 
DEPARTMENT oF BroLogy—Continued. 

Division of Marine Invertebrates: Richard Rathbun, Curator; J. BE. Bene- 
dict, Assistant Curator; Mary J. Rathbun, Assistant Curator; Har- 
riet Richardson, Collaborator. 

Section of Helminthological Collections: C. W. Stiles, Custodian; B. H. 
Ransom, Assistant Custodian. 

Division of Plants (National Herbarium) : Frederick V. Coville, Curator; 
J. N. Rose, Associate Curator; W. R. Maxon, Assistant Curator; 
J. H. Painter, Aid. 

Section of Cryptogamic Collections: O. I. Cook, Assistant Curator, 
Section of Higher Algie: W. T. Swingle, Custodian, 
Section of Lower Fungi: D. G. Fairchild, Custodian. 

Associates in Zoology : Theodore N. Gill, C. Hart Merriam, R. H.C. Stearns, 
W. L. Abbott. 

Associates in Botany: Edward L. Green, John Donnell Smith. 

DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGY : 
George P. Merrill, Head Curator. 

Division of Physical and Chemical Geology (Systematic and Applied) : 
George P. Merrill, Curator. 

Division of Mineralogy: I. W. Clarke, Curator; Wirt Tassin, Assistant 
Curator, 

Division of Invertebrate Paleontology: RLS. Bassler, Curator; Lancaster D. 
Burling, Assistant Curator. 

Carboniferous Collection: George H. Girty, Custodian. 
Mesozoie Collection: T. W. Stanton, Custodian, 

Cenozoic Collection: W. TL. Dall, Associate Curator, 
Madreporarian Corals: T. Wayland Vaughan, Custodian, 

Division of Vertebrate Paleontology: 

Mammalian Collection: James W. Gidley, Custodian. 
Reptilian Collection: Charles W. Gilmore, Custodian. 

Division of Palcobotany: David White, Associate Curator; A. C. Peale, 
Aid; F. I. Knowlton, Custodian of Mesozoic Plants. 

Associate in Mineralogy: L. T. Chamberlain. 

Associate in Paleontology: Charles A. White. ; 

Associate in Paleobotany: Lester I. Ward. 

DEPARTMENT OF MINERAL TECHNOLOGY : 
Charles D. Walcott, Curator. 
NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART: 
William H. Holmes, Curator. 


ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF. 


Chief of Correspondence and Documents: KR. 1. Geare. 
Disbursing Agent: W. [. Adams, 

Superintendent of Construction and Labor: J. S. Goldsmith. 
Editor: Marcus Benjamin. 

Editorial Assistant: E. S. Steele. 

Assistant Librarian: N, P. Scudder. 

Photographer: T. W. Smillie. 

Registrar: S. C. Brown. 

Property Clerk: W. A. Knowles. 


LIST OF. ACCESSIONS TO THE COLLECTIONS DURING 
THE FISCAL YEAR 1907-1908. 


[Exeept when otherwise indicated, the specimens were prese nted or were transferred by 
bureaus of the Government in accordance with law.] 


ABBE, CLEVELAND, jr., Washington, 
D. C.: German and Austrian cakes 
(12409: loan), 

Appott, W. L., Singapore, Straits Set- 


tlements: A large and valuable col- | 


lection of ethnological and natural 
history specimens from Sumatra and 
adjacent islands (47566); a large 
and very interesting collection of 
material illustrating the manners 
nnd customs of the Dyaks, and of 
natural history specimens, including 
mammals, birds, reptiles, etc., from 
Borneo (48220). 

ACADEMY OF NATURAL SCIENCES, Phila- 
delphia, Pa.: Collection of birds’ 
skins, Formicariidae (4SSGS: loan). 

ADLER, Cyrus, Smithsonian Institu- 
tion: Pair of Jewish phylacteries 
from Jerusalem (48064). 

AGRICULTURE, DEPARTMENT OF: 

Bureau of Animal Industry: Skin 
and skeleton of a female Greyy Ze- 
bra from Abyssinia (47992). 

Bureau of Biological Survey: 8 
living cacti, Opuntia, collected in 
Colorado by Merritt Cary (47552) ; 
2 living cacti, Opuntia, collected by 
‘Vernon Bailey at Warren, Cal. 
(47568): 3 cacti, Opuntia, collected 
by Vernon Bailey in California 
(47627); 5 plants from California 
collected by Vernon Bailey (47628) ; 
2 cacti, Opuntia, from California col- 
lected by IX. A. Goldman (47629) ; 
lizard from China (47680); speci- 
men of living cactus, Opuntia, from 
Colorado (47638); 31 flies (47651) ; 
2 plants from California collected 


AGRICULTURE, DEPARTMENT OF—Cont'd. 


by Vernon Bailey (47652); plants 
from Colorado collected by Merritt 
Cary (47653); 12 specimens of Dip- 
tera from the District of Columbia 
and vicinity (47708); living cacti, 
Opuntia, collected in Colorado by 
Merritt Cary (47711); 2 plants, 
Pinus, collected in Colorado by Mer- 


ritt Cary (47735); 5 specimens of 
living cacti, Onuitiv, collected in 
California by Vernon sailey 


(47804); living specimen of cactus, 
Opuntia, collected in California by 
Vernon Bailey (47811); 2 specimens 
of Juniperus occidentalis collected 
in Siskiyou County, Cal., by C. Hart 
Merriam (47825); 6 plants collected 
in Colorado by Merritt Cary 
(47838) ; 2 living cacti, Opuntia, col- 
lected in California by Vernon 
Bailey (47888); living specimen of 
cactus, Opuntia, collected in Cali- 
fornia by Vernon Bailey (47978) ; 
7 plants collected in Colorado by 
Merritt Cary (48017); specimen of 
living plant, Dudleya, collected in 
‘alifornia by E. <A. Goldman 
(48020) ; 2 living cacti, Opuntia, col- 
lected in California by Vernon 
Bailey (48028); 14 plants collected 
in California by KE. A. Goldman 
(48059); 38 living cacti, Opuntia, 
collected in Colorado by Merritt 
Cary (48073); 2 specimens of cacti, 
Opuntia, collected in Washington 
and North Dakota (48125) ; 4 plants 
collected by Merritt Cary in Colo- 
rado (48137); 6 plants from Ne- 
braska collected by Merritt Cary 
67 


68 


AGRICULTURE, DEPARTMENT OF—Cont'd. 
(48179); 2 living plants, 
laceae, obtained by KE. A. 
from Berkeley, Cal. 
birds in alcohol, 8 spiders and a 
leech (48259) ; 3 species of land and 
fresh-water shells from California 
(48336) =. 83 collected — by 
Vernon 
tion of the United States (48353) ; 
6 living plants, Dudleya, collected in 
California by KE. A. Goldman 


plants 


(48582); specimen of sedge, Carer 


nebraskensis, from California, 
lected by GC. Hart Merriam (48488) ; 
21 plants collected in Colorado by 
Merritt Cary (48616); 2 
from California (48621); 2 
collected in Louisiana by <A. H. 
Howell (48668) ; 2 
chier, collected in the 
Columbia by W. L. McAtee (48715) ; 
plant, deserti, from 
fornia, collected by Vernon 
(48728). 

Bureau of Entomology: 42° speci- 
mens of Lepidoptera collected in 
Miiller (47546); 14 
mosquitoes collected at Stockton and 
transmitted by TH. J. 
ley, Cal. 


Agave 
sailey 


Mexico by KR. 


City, Mexico (47575) ; 
collected by John IR. Johnston, Bu- 
Plant 
with 
“bud rot” of the cocoanut palm in 
the West Indies (47607) ; 102 speci- 
Hlemiptera from 
sources, principally collected by E. 
S. G. Titus (47608); 
a crustacean collected by George P. 
Goll, in (47615) ; 
collection of insects from the Canal 


reau of Industry, in connec- 


tion 


mens of 


reptiles 


Guatemala 


Zone, Panama, made by Mr. August 


summer of 1907 
Lepidoptera from R. 
Mexico City, 
(47746) ; 79 specimens of Lepidop- 
tera from R. 


Busek in the 
(47667); 42 
Miller, 


new species (47835); 


Crassu- 
Goldman, 
(48215) ;, 12 


sailey in the western sec- 


col- 


plants 
plants 


plants, Amelan- 
District of 


Cali- 


Quayle, Berke- 
(47560); 45 specimens of 
Lepidoptera from IR. Miiller, Mexico 
about 100 
specimens of insects, mostly larvae, 


his investigations of the 


various 
and 


large 


Mexico 


MiiNler (47755); 57 


specimens of Hymenoptera, types of 


specimen of 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


AGRICULTURE, DEPARTMENT OF—Cont’d. 
Lampronota marginata (ATS8386) ; 50 
insects from Dr. A. Dugés,..Guana- 
juato, Mexico (47842): 24 slides of 
Collembola and Thysanura from 
Mrs. IY. L. Harvey, Orono, Me. 
(47848) ; 14 insects from Rev. <A. HH. 
Manee, Southern Pines, N. GC. 
(47849) > about 50° insects, mostly 
ITymenoptera (47864) ; 8 specimens 
of Coleoptera and 1 of Hymenoptera 
from Rey. A. H. Manee (47892) ; 
10 specimens of an isopod, Armadil- 
lidium vulgare, from Waco, Tex., 
collected by Paul Tauhurst (48088) ; 
51 specimens of Lepidoptera from 


Mexico, collected by R. Miiller 
(48131): about 1,000 specimens of 
Lepidoptera from Texas, resulting 


from the cotton-boll weevil investi- 
gations (48160); 2 nests of a but- 
terfly, Mucheira socialis, from Mex- 
ico (48161); isopod, Liguda exotica, 
from the Azores, collected by L. O. 
Howard, and an isopod, JJ/etoponor- 
thus pruinosus, from Dalton, Tex., 
collected by W. Dwight Pierce 
(48165); GOO specimens of named 
Ifymenoptera (48218) ; about 200 in- 
sects from Mexico sent by Frederick 
Knab (48224); about 200 
from Mexico, collected by F. Knab 
(48242): 40 specimens of Lepidop- 
tern from Mexico obtained by R. 
Miiler (48258); 291 specimens of 
Ilemiptera obtained from Robert 
Meusel, Kismaros, Nograd-megye, 
Hungary (48264); about 250 insects 
collected by FF. Knab in Cordoba, 
Mexico (483807); about SO insects 
collected by E. G. Kelly at Manhat- 
tan, Kans, (48509) ; about 50 larvae 


insects 


and cocoons of Lepidoptera from 
North China, collected by F. N. 


12 chironomid flies 
(48358): 40 specimens of Lepidop- 
tera from Mexico, collected by R. 
Miiller (48575); 7 flies obtained 
from V. A. I. Daecke, Philadelphia, 
Pa. (48876); 5 flies from Dr. JD. 
Lahille, Argentina (48377); 1,148 
specimens of Coleoptera, mainly 
Huropean, but including a few from 


Meyer (483865) ; 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 69 


AGRICULTURE, DEPARTMENT OF—Cont'd. 


Java (48408); 2 isopods, Porcellio 
dilatatus, from California (484338) ; 
about 50 insects collected by O. W. 
Barrett (48465); about 800. speci- 
mens of Lepidoptera from Mexico, 
collected by F. Knab (48468); 10 
specimens of Diptera and 2 of Hy- 
menoptera from B. Bilgen, Para- 
maribo, Surinam (48477); 50 speci- 
mens of Lepidoptera (lot 24) col- 
lected by R. Miiller (48487) ; about 
100 mosquitoes, larvae on slides and 
in alcohol, obtained by Dr. James 
Aiken, sritish Guiana (48491); 
about 250 specimens of Lepidoptera, 
eoHected by F. Knab in Mexico 
(48510); 41 specimens of Lepidop- 
tera from H. Lacy, Kerrville, Tex. 
(48522); 6 specimens of Diptera 
from Para, Brazil, sent by Carl F, 
Baker (48583); 8 specimens of Hy- 
Pa ‘a_of the group Apheleninae 

48584); 2 specimens of Hymenop- 
He from Hawaii (48542); 6 speci- 
mens of Hymenoptera from Nathan 
Banks (48548); 11 parasitic Hyme- 
noptera bred from Cecidomyia by 
H. A. Ballou, Antigua, West Indies 
(48562); about 75 seed pods of 
Yueea containing larvae, probably of 
Pronuba (48578); T specimens of 
Hymenoptera, types and cotypes of 
Cosmocomoidea morrillii (48574); 
about 800 specimens of Lepidoptera 
from Mexico, collected by I. Knab 
(48575) ; 4 specimens of Hymenop- 
tera, Pamphilius persicum, from W. 
HE. Britton, New Haven, Conn. 
(48581) ; 46 specimens of Lepidop- 
tera from R. Miiller, Mexico City 
(48595); 8S specimens of Diptera, 
types of Zygobothria nidicola and 
Tachnia utilis, bred at the Gypsy 
Moth Laboratory, Melrose High- 
lands, Mass. (48599); 2 specimens 
of Lepidoptera and 2 noctuids 
(48608) ; 21 specimens of Lepidop- 
tera and 2 of Hymenoptera (48617) ; 
5 mosquitoes, .ides teniorhynchius, 
from La Boca, Panama (48264); 19 
specimens of Lepidoptera from KE. S. 
Tucker, Texas (48634); about 500 


AGRICULTURE, DEPARTMENT OF—Cont’d. 


insects collected by EF. Knab— in 
Mexico (48641); 7 specimens of 
Lepidoptera, Vetralopha  subcanilis 
(48642); about 500 specimens of 
Lepidoptera obtained by FY. Knab in 
Mexico (48645) ; 
mens of Lepidoptera obtained by F. 
Knab in Mexico (48653 21 speci- 
mens of Lepidoptera fans K. S. G. 
Titus (48664); 89 specimens of 
Lepidoptera obtained by R. Miiller 
in Mexico (48689); 16 slides of in- 
sects (48694) ; 287 specimens of Lep- 
idoptera from Texas (48705); about 
1,000 specimens of Lepidoptera from 
Mexico, collected by EF. Knab 
(48742); about 200 specimens of 
Lepidoptera collected by F. Knab 
(48751) ; Limacodid larva, Lepidop- 
tera (48764) ; about 4.000 specimens 
of Hymenoptera collected in the vi- 
cinity of Washington, ID. C., by H. H, 
Smith (48765) ; 2 lepidopterous lar- 
yvae from Florida (48766); about 
2,600 specimens of Hymenoptera, in- 
cluding many types, belonging to the 
subfamily Ineyrtinae (48856) ; about 
6,000 insects collected in Mexico by 
IF. Knab (48886); 11 ants from 
Tahiti, and an Eneyrtid from Cape 
Town, Africa (48898) ; 
of Ilymenoptera and 2 specimens of 
Diptera from California (48899) ; 
20 specimens of Lepidoptera, Acro- 
bUSisS Sp. 3 


about 500 speci- 


4 specimens 


15 specimens of J/egastig- 
mus collaris (Hymenoptera) and 3 
specimens of Syntomaspis druforwm 
(Hymenoptera) (48900) ; 
from Mexico (48921). 
Bureau of Plant Industry: 139. 
plants collected by EF. V. Coville in 
Oregon (47642); specimen of living 
cactus, Opuntia, collected by O. F. 
Cook in Guatemala (47668); plants 
collected by C. R. Ball in Texas 


tree-frogs 


(47695) ; 5 specimens of living cacti, 
Opuntia, collected in Texas by C. R. 
Ball (47718) ; 
Cactaceae and Crassulacere, collected 
in Texas by F. L. Lewton and R. M. 
Meade (47766); 3 specimens of Ju- 
niperus pinchoti, collected in Texas 


1S specimens of living 


70 REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


AGRICULTURE, DEPARTMENT OF—Cont’d. | AGRICULTURE, DEPARTMENT OF—Cont’d. 


by C. V. Piper (47805); between 
200 and $800 insects collected in 
Guatemala by Argyle MecLaughlan 
(47845): 8 living orchids from Flor- 
ida collected by Mrs. Agnes Chase 
(47870) ; 165 specimens of Harvey's 
“Maine weeds and forage plants” 
(47909) ; 1,640 grasses from various 
localities (47958) ; 8 plants collected 
in Porto Rico by L. H. Dewey 
(48027) : a collection of 2,556 grasses 
from yarious parts of the United 


living specimens of cacti, Opuntia, 
collected in Utah by I. Tidestrom 
(47977) ; about 500 plants collected 
by I. Tidestrom in Utah (48199) ; 
245 plants from Oregon collected by 
Messrs. Sampson and = Pierson 
(48214); 10S) plants collected in 
Oregon by James T. Jardine (48326) ; 
specimen of living cactus, Opuntia, 
from Arizona, collected by I. Tide- 
strom (48572); 89 plants collected 
in Arizona by I. Tidestrom (48692). 


States, many of them having been 
collected by Virginius H. Chase, 
Wady Petra, U1. (48037) ; 28 plants 
from central New York, obtained by 
W. W. Rowlee (48052); 5 plants 
(48072) ; 2 living plants, Hehinoce- 
reus viridiflorus, collected in Texas 
by C. R: Ball (48297); 234 plants 
collected in Mexico in 1907 by W. EB. 


DEPARTMENT, I isheries 
(See under Dublin, [re- 


AGRICULTURE 
Branch of. 
land.) 

AINSLEY, C. N., Department of Agri- 
culture, Washington, D. C.: Speci- 
men of two-winged fly, Opsebius 
sulphuripes (48480), 


ALBANY MuSEUM. (See under Gra- 


hamstown, Cape Colony, South 
Safford (483879); 4 living plants . 7 i 
‘ ; fol rk Africa.) 
Dudleya pulverulenta and Nehino- ; : ie 
: H rH i. 4 r 
cactus viridescens, collected by W.'T. ALDRICH, rue Mn, ; W Leste 
Mass.: Spider, LH peira insularis 


Swingle in California (48457); 2 
living specimens of Dudleya collected 
in California by W. ‘TT. Swingle 
(48478) 2 16 plants collected by C. Y. 
Piper in the southwestern part of 
Virginia (48779). 

Huarperiment Stations: 24 specimens 
of Alaskan plants collected by Miss 
K. F. Woolsey (48129); 59 speci- 
menus of Hawaiian algae collected by 
Miss Minnie Reed, of the Kamaha- 
meha schools and transmitted by the 
Hawaiian Experiment Station 
(47822). 

Forest Service: Specimen of living | 
cactus, Opuntia, collected in Utah 
by I. Tidestrom (47712); specimen 
of cactus, Opuntia, and a package of 
collected by I. 


(47981). 

ALDRICH, J. M., Moscow, Idaho: 15 
specimens of — flies, IIelomyzidae 
(48812: exchange). 

AbLpRIDGE, C. P., Roanoke, Va.: Worm 
known among fishermen as the 
“dobson,” Corydalis  cornutus 
(48864). 

ALEXANDER, CHARLES LT., Johnstown, 
N. ¥.: 8 specimens of /Zymenoptera 
(48464). 

ALEXANDER, WILLIAM II., Empire, Ca- 
nal Zone, Panama: Beetle, Acroci- 
nus longimanus (ASDIT). 


ALFARO, ANASTASIO, San José, Costa 
Rica, Central America: Reptiles and 
batrachians from Costa Rica (48560) ; 
10 skins of Cistothorus polyglottus 
lucidus from Costa Rica (4S8S0). 


seeds ‘Tidestrom 
(47767); 5 living plants, Mehinoce- 
reus, collected in Utah by I. Tide- | 
strom (47786); 10 specimens of liy- | AELATRE, C. B., San Antonio, Tex.: 2 

specimens of cactus, Opiiotia 


(48905 


ing cacti, Opuntia, collected in Utah 
by I. Tidestvom (47801); living cac- 
tus, Opuntia, collected in Colorado | ALLEN, JoHN A., Cleveland, Ohio: An- 
acharis associated with living speci- 
mens of Ancylus and Planorbis from 
Ohio (48128). 


by I. Videstrom (47854); 5° speci- 
mens of living cacti, Mchinocereus 
sp., from Hugo, Utah (47910); 2 | 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


ALLEN, R. A., jr., U. S. National Mu- 
seum: Arrow points and fragments 
of pottery from Terrapin Neck, 
Amelia County, Va. (48105). 

AMERICAN MUSEUM oF NATURAL HIs- 
rory, New York City: Collection of 
fossil Mammals (48172: exchange) ; 
plan and sketch illustrating the 
death drum from the Bismarck 
Archipelago (48166): 2 casts each 
of the fore and hind feet of Camp- 
tosaurus dispar (48821: exchange) ; 
29 specimens of Formicariidae 
(48914: loan). 

ANDERSON, Rey. R. W., Eagle Pass, 
Tex.: Large noctuid moth, Hrebus 
odora (47576). 

ANDREWS, Miss HE. I*., Montgomery, 
Ala.: 2 specimens of Argemone from 
Alabama (48829). 

APPLETON, Eben, New York City: The 
flag which floated Fort Me- 
Henry when ey “The 
Star Spangled Banner” (12341: 

loan). 


over 
composed 


D’AQUINO, J. L. F., Shanghai, China: 
109 birds’ eggs from China (47937: 
purchase). 

ARCHENHOLD, Dr. F. S., Treptow- 
Sternwarte, Treptow bei Berlin, Ger- 
many: 2 specimens of moldavite 
(48419: exchange). 

BABBITT, Col. E. B., U. S. Army 
(through Capt. Frank R.): McCoy, 
U. S. Army): 2 heads of wild car- 
abao from northern Luzon (48425). 

Back, Ernest <A., Orlando, Fla.: 
Morn, Syntomeida ipomaac (ATT44). 


BalLey, J. W. T., Atkins, Ark.: Pho- 
tograph of a collection of Indian 
relics belonging to Mr. Bailey 
(48647). 

BAKER, CARL F., Santiago de las Vegas, 
Cuba: Specimen of cereus fruit 
from Cuba (47656: exchange) ; 157 


specimens of Lepidoptera (47675) ; 
9 specimens of ferns (47875); a set 


of economic plants from various 
parts of the world (47970: ex- 
change); 75 specimens of Lepi- 


(gl 


Baker, Cart I'.—Continued. 
doptera (48594) ; about 75 specimens 
of Lepidoptera, chiefly from Brazil 
(48640); about 50 
Lepidoptera (48814). 


specimens of 


BAKER, CHARLES, Paducah, Ky.: Albino 


raccoon, Procyon lotor (48654: 
purchase), 
Baker, F. H., Richmond, Victoria, 


Australia: GO shells from Australia 
(47896; 48891: photo- 
graph of roadhknighti: 28 
specimens representing 11 species of 
marine shells from Australia (48076). 


exchange) ; 
Voluta 


BALDERSTON, JOHN L., Kennett Square, 
Pa.: Specimen of plant, Centaurea, 
from Pennsylvania (47856): 2 
specimens of Stachys  germanica 
from Pennsylvania (48905). 

ERNEST, U. S. National Mu- 

seum: Spanish boatswain’s whistle 

from a wrecked vessel at Cavite 

(48674) ; 7 specimens—larvae, pupae, 

and adult—of Vespa maculata, from 

Fairfax County, Va. (48857). 


BALES, 


Batuou, H. A. (received through the 
Bureau of Entomology, Department 
of Agriculture) : About 
mens of Lepidoptera from St. Lucia 
and Dominica, West Indies (48839). 

3AMBERG, PAuL, Friedenau bei Berlin, 
Germany : 63S species of fossils from 
the upper Jurassic, Hocene, Miocene, 
Pliocene, and Oligocene of Europe 
(48855: exchange). 

BaAaNGs, OvuTRAM, Boston, Mass.: 10 
specimens of Selasphorus flamimula 
from Costa Rica (48865) ; 144 birds’ 

Costa (48623 : 


250 speci- 


skins from Rica 


change). 


ex= 


Banks, NATHAN, Department of Agri- 
culture, Washington, D. C.: 2 bees, 


Neopasites sp., from near Falls 
Church, Va., and a_ specimen of 
Hucerocoris guttulatus from the 


same locality (47561: 47674). 

BarBer, H. S., U. S. National Museum: 
Skin and skull of a porcupine, [re- 
thizon, from near Crab Lake, Vilas 
County, Wis.; insects found on yari- 
ous fungi (48106). 


72 


BarBER, MANLY D., Knoxville, Tenn.: 
About 500 specimens of Ordovician 
fossils from the vicinity of Knox- 
ville (47721: exchange) ; 
mens of Mississippi fossils (48125). 

BarRsBer, V. S., Washington, D. C.: 
Chain with links of coiled stem, ob- 
tained from the Digger Indians of 
California (48186). 

BARBOUR, of Com- 
parative Zoology, Cambridge, Mass. : 


aay 
veo 


speci- 


THomMas, Museum 


2 frogs from Ecuador and a lizard 
from the Bonin Islands (48333). 


BARCLAY, GEORGE C., Newport News, 
Vito implements (47824): 


G6 fragments of pottery (48156). 


stone 


Barrort, A. F., Washington, D. C.: 
Human lower jaw from a burial- 
mound — at Bassett, Mississippi 
County, Ark. (47670); sphere of 


granite from Spencer, Tioga County, 
N. Y. (48054). 
BarTLetTtT, C. L., Bristol, 
Osmundia, frou. Vermont 
BARTEETT, Ht. -E., 
Cambridge, Mass. : 


Vt.: Fern, 

(48943). 
Herbarium, 
of 


Gray 
» 
> 


specimens 


Laciniaria from Georgia (48005). 


BARTRAM, Epwin B., Wayne, Pa.: 49 
plants from Virginia, New Jersey, 


(48401). 


BayLey, IvAN A., Sydney Mines, Nova 
Scotia: Sea mouse, Aphrodita acu- 
leata (475389). 


SUMNER, 


LG, 


BEACH, Wilder, Mont.: 5 
stone implements (47817). 

Bean, Dr. Roperr BenNert, Manila, 
P.I.: Anatomical specimens (48849). 

TH., 

dipterous insects, Dicracus obsceurus, 


BECKER, Liegnitz, Germany: 2 


from southern Europe (48517). 


Beit, Dr. ALEXANDER GRAHAM, Wash- 
ington, D. C.: Collection of tele- 
phonic apparatus, including the re- 
maining parts of the first speaking 
telephone and of many 

forms of (4SS5H0: 


originals 
early telephone 


loan). 

Benepict, J. E., Jr., Woodside, Md.; 4 
crayfishes from North Carolina 
(48203). 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


BENGUIAT, HADJI EPHRAIM, New York 
City: Jewish religious ceremonial 
objects (483885: loan). 

BENJAMIN, Marcus, U. S. National 
Museum: Photograph of trophy 
awarded by the Scientific American 
for “ heavier-than-air” flying ma- 
chines (47841); platinum-aleohol 
cigar lighter (47850). 

BeRLIN, GERMANY, WKONIGL. ZOooLo- 
GISCHES MusrtumM: 110 specimens of 
Orthoptera (48049; exchange). 

BERLIN, GERMANY, RoyaL BOTANICAL 
Museum: 670 plants, obtained main- 


ly from cultivation (48159: ex- 
change). 

Beveripce, Hon. ALBert J., United 
States Senate: Swords, weapons, 
and other articles collected in the 
Philippine Islands, Japan, and else- 
where in the Far East (48702: 
loan). 

Bickitry, Ff. D. T., Marietta, Olio; 
Stone implements from camping 
grounds of the Six Nations, New 


York State (4818S). 

Bippie, Lypia SPeNcER, Washington, 
ID. C.: Silver pitcher, 1750, and sil- 
ver sugar bowl, 1780 (48801: loan). 

BIEDERMAN, C. R., Palmerlee, Ariz.: 6 
specimens of Coleoptera from near 
the mouth of Millers Canon, Hua- 
chuea Mountains, Ariz. (48016). 


IienKowsk, A., Ancon, Canal Zone, 
Panama: Costumes worn by the In- 
dians of Veraguas and other places 
in the interior of the Republic of 
Panama; nest of an “ Oropindola ” 
(48141). 

RIGELOW, Boston, 


WILLIAM STURGIS, 


Mass.: One of the earliest bicycles 
made in the United States (47725). 


Birp, Henry, Rye, N. Y.: 6 moths, 5 
cotypes of Hydroccias, and a Tineid, 
Gnorimosehema gallaesolidaginis 

(48317). 

Perer, Washington, 

Plants, Vymphaea (47603). 


LISserT, D, 

Bitz, FRANKLIN W., Baltimore, Md.: 
Human skull from the ruins of an 
Inca city in Bolivia (48094). 


/ 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


Buack, Lieut. FRep. F., U. S. Army, 
Fort Liscum, Alaska: 60 plants from 
Alaska (48472). 


Brackiston, A. H., El Paso, Tex.: 
Archeological material from the 
Casas Grandes Valley, Chihuahua, 


Mexico (48488, 12355, 12511, 12571). 
Loan. 


BuakE, I. P., Imperial, Cal.: Snake, 


Chionactis annulatus (48428). 


3LANCHARD, W. H., Westminster, Vt.: 
203 plants, Rubus, Amelanchier and 
Betula, from the northeastern part 
of the United States 
(48596: purchase). 


3LANKINGSHIP, O. F., Richmond, Va.: 
Samples of diatomaceous earth from 
several localities in Richmond 
(48479). 

BLANKINSHIP, J. W., Steglitz, Berlin, 
Germany: 189 specimens of plants 
from Montana (48859; purchase). 


BLumMErR, J. C., Paradise, 
living plants from Arizona 


ATIZG: 15 
(47973). 

BLUMER, Mrs. J. C., Paradise, Ariz.: 2 
plants from Arizona (47626). 


Boston SocteTy oF NATURAL HIsToRY, 
Boston, Mass.: 136 specimens of 
Lepidoptera collected by Owen Bry- 
ant (48551). 


INSTITUTE OF 
(See under 


3OTANICAL GARDEN AND 
THE RoyaLt UNIVERSITY. 
Vienna, Austria.) 


30TANICAL MUSEUM OF THE UNITIVERSI- 
TY OF LAUSANNE. (See under Lau- 
sanne, - Switzerland.) 

BOTANICAL SOCIETY OF WESTERN PENN- 
SYLVANIA, Pittsburg, Pa.: 2 plants, 
Lactuca, from Pennsylvania. (48327). 

BouLencer, G. A. 
tian Government.) 


(See under HKgyp- 


Bowpoin, Mrs. James S., Washington, 
D. C.: Piece of Rhodian embroidery 
(48800: loan). 


BoyaDJIAN, BENJAMIN H., 
Turkey in Asia: Wax impressions 
of the seal of a ring (48496). 


Mersina, 


and Canada 


73 


BRANDEGEER, T. S., Berkeley, Cal. : 
ing plant, Cereus vagans, from 
Mexico (47733: exchange) ; 5 Mexi- 
can ferns (48602); fern from Mex- 
ico (48644). 

Braun, Miss ANNettTE F., Cincinnati, 
Ohio: 24 specimens of Microlepidop- 
tera (480438, 48523). 


Liv- 


BREEN STONE CoMPANY, St. Paul, 
Minn.: 2 samples of marble from 


Ikasota, Minn. (48889). 

BREWER, ISAAC W., Fort Huachuea, 
Aviz.: Several specimens of Physa 
from Huachuea Canon, Ariz. (47907). 


SREWER, S. W., Singer Glen, Va.: Cop- 
perhead, Agkistrodon  contortria 
(47540). 


BRICKLAYERS COMPANY OF THE CITY 
AND COUNTY OF PHILADELPHIA, Phil- 
adelphia, va. = (received = through 
William Smith, chairman of commit- 
tee on history): An engraved illus: 
tration entitled ‘“ Plans of house 

>in which Thomas Jefferson wrote 
the Declaration of Independence ” 
(48590). 

BRIMLEY, C. S., Raleigh, N. 
specimens of Lepidoptera 
47748 ; 48274; 483835; 48374). 


Cie 82 
(47641 ; 


BrimMLey Brotuers, Raleigh, N. C.: 
specimens of Amphiuma (47703: 
purchase). 


BRINTON, Mrs. FRepDEric C., West Ches- 
ter, Pa.: Marble-top table formerly 
owned by Thomas Jefferson (48163). 

BRINTON, J. Percy, West Chester, Pa.: 
Photograph of the late Dr. D. G. 
$rinton (48184), 

Pritiso Museum (NaturaL Hisrory). 
(See under London, England.) 


BroaDway, W. E., Port-of-Spain, Trini- 
dad: 3 plants, Cissus (48238: pur- 
chase). 


$RODIE, W., Toronto, Canada: 4 garter 


snakes from Canada (48262). 
3ROMLEY, Howarp, Farmville, Va.: 
Specimen of tortoise-beetle, Copto- 


cycla pallida (47833). 


74 


BrookKtyN, NEw York, THE MUSEUM, 
INSTITUTE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES: 5 


Longicorn beetles (48426: eX- 
change); ethnological specimens 


from the cliff dwellers of the Canons 
de Chelly and del Muerto, Ariz. 
(48591: exchange); 35 
Hymenoptera from Surinam (48655) ; 
Pomo Indian tule boat with wooden 
paddles (48661) : exchange), 


Brooks, Lewis, Santiago de Cuba: 
Large crab, JJithrar spinosissimus 
(47541). 


Brown, E. J.. Lemon City, Fla.: Fishes, 
reptiles, insects, and 
from Florida (48597). 

Mrs. Gorton, Battle 

Creek, Mich.: 25 photographs illus- 

trating the native life of the Tamils, 

northeastern Ceylon 


invertebrates 


tROWN, GILES 


a people of 
(48672). 
Brown, H. IL., Glenwood, Cal.: Larva 
of a caddis fly (47545). 
Brown, Tlrram, Franklin, Pa.: 10 spee- 
imens of “mud puppy,” Cryptobran- 


chus (ATT9S: purchase). 


Brown, WILLIAM, Oil Center, Cal.: 
Praying mantis, Stagmomantis lim- 


bata (AT955). 


JARDIN Bora- 
NIQUE DE VErar: 42 plants, mainly 
ferns, from tropical America (48579: 
exchange). 


BRUSSELS, BELGIUM. 


Mass.: 48 
Newfoundland 
lizard, 
Andros 


Bryant, Owen, Cohasset, 
birds’ skins 
(47887); 3 
Sphacrodactylus, — from 


Island, Bahamas (48657). 


from 
specimens of 


BucHANAN, WILLIAM R., Washington. 
D. C.: Anatomical specimen (48824). 
BucknHovut, W. A., State College, Pa.: 
Berries of Gaultheria procumbens 
from Pennsylvania (48126). 
Howarp, 
style, 


BUCKLER, CGC. 
Dy OPS. Ola 
with iron tires, ete. 


Washington, 
wooden bicycle 


(478098). 


HUNGARY, HUNGARIAN Na- 
Museum: 70 


BUDAPEST, 
TIONAL specimens of 
Chrysididae (47644; exchange). 


specimens of 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


BURBANK, LUTHER, Santa Rosa, Cal.: 
3 flowers of Nopalea sp., from culti- 
vation (47775); specimen of living 
spineless cacti, Opuntia (47950). 


Busck, Avucust, Department of Agri- 


culture, Washington, D. C.: Concre- 
tion from the Culebra cut, Canal 
Zone, Panama (47666); bats; skin 


and skull of porcupine from Panama 
(47697: collected for the Museum) : 
reptiles and batrachians from the 
Canal Zone, Panama (47759); 18 
specimens of Lepidoptera from 
Maryland (48635); 12 specimens of 
livmenoptera, parasitic on spider's 
eges, from Hyattsville, Md. (48699) ; 
75 specimens of Lepidoptera (48746). 

Busy, B. F., Courtney, Mo.: 125 
plants from Missouri and other lo- 
calities (47800: purchase and 48226: 
exchange), 

Butter, J. H., jr., Youngstown, Ohio: 
Photographs of Indian portraits in 
Mr. Butler’s collection (48290). 

BUYSMANN, M., Lawang, 
Java: 100 ferns from Java 
purchase ). 


Pascercean, 
(48248 : 


CALCUTTA, INDIA, RoyAL BoTANIC GAR- 


DEN (received through the Royal 
Botanic Gardens, Kew, England): 
39 plants from Tibet (47772: ex- 
change). 

CALDWELL, Rev. Harry, ERNEST B., 


and Epen F., Neu-cheng, China: 218 


inseets, mostly butterflies, from 
Sharp Peak Island, near Foochow, 
collected in 1907 (47826). 


CALIFORNIA, UNIVERSITY OF, Berkeley, 
Cal.: Plants and a fern from Lower 


California and Mexico (47751; 
48096; 48111; exchange); plant 
from Lower California (4800S). 
CAMBRIDGE, MAss., MUSEUM OF CoMm- 
PARATIVE Zootocy: 2 toads from 
Bengal (48740); 5 snakes, Dia- 
dophis (48846; loan); 95 crinoids 


(47928: exchange). 


CANNON, W. A., Tucson, Ariz.: Speci- 
men of living cactus, Opuntia, from 
Arizona (48754), 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 


CARNEGIE Hero FUND COMMISSION, 
Pittsburg, Pa.: A specimen of the 
Carnegie hero fund medal in silver 
(48706). 

CARNEGIE INSTITUTION, Washington, 
D. C.: Ordovician from 
China collected by Bailey Willis and 
Eliot Blackwelder (47618) ; 15 speci- 
mens of cacti, Opuntia, from <Ari- 
zona (47839); seeds of cactus, 
Opuntia, from Arizona, collected by 
Dr. D. T. MaeDougal (47908); 6 
living cacti, Opuntia, from Arizona 
(47917); seeds of cacti, Opuntia, 
from Arizona (47951); S7 dried 
plants, 14 cacti, and from 
Sonora, Mexico, received through 
Dr. D. T. MacDougal (48168); re- 
cent corals, geological specimens, 
and bottom simples from the Flor- 

and reefs (48922 

CARSON, WILLIAM S., Kalama, Wash.: 
Samples of coprolites from Salmon 
Creek, Wash. (48695). 

CasA GRANDE EXCAVATIONS, 1907: 
About 1,000 specimens of stone im- 

pottery, basketry, fabrics, 

resulting from explorations 
and exeavations conducted at the 
Casa Grande Ruin, Ariz., by Dr. J. 
Walter Fewkes, 1906-1907, under a 
special appropriation in the sun- 
dry civil act approved June 30, 
1906 (48761). 

Casry, Col. THomas L., U. S. 
Washington, D. C.: 
Omophron from 
set (48856). 


fossils 


seeds 


ida coast, keys 


plements, 
etc., 


Army, 
Specimen of 
gemma the type 

Dr- 
(See 


TARM, 
AGRICULTURE. 
Canada. ) 


CENTRAL EXPERIMENTAL 
PARTMENT OF 
under Ottawa, 


CHAGNON, G., Montreal, Canada: 9 

specimens of Hymenoptera (476138). 
New York 
2 mosses from Japan (48011). 


CHAMBERLAIN, EpWaArpD B., 
City: 


Dunn 
Samia 


CHAPIN, GUY, 
Specimen of 
(48832). 


Loring, Va.: 
cecropia with 

eges 
CHAPPELEAN, Mary Y., Benedict, Md.: 


Specimen of luna moth, Actias luna 
(48837). 


1908. 15 


CHASE, V. H., Wady Petra, Ill.: 206 
plants from Illinois (48122: ex- 
change). 

CHICAGO, UNIVERSITY OF, Chicago, II1.: 


7 guttapercha impressions of type 
specimens of invertebrate 
(47840) ; plant, Lycopodium pithyoi- 
des, from Jalapa, (47919: 
exchange). 


fossils 
Mexico 


CHITTENDEN, IF’. H., Bureau of Ento- 
mology, Department of Agriculture, 
Washington, D. C.: 225 specimens of 
Coleoptera from Venezuela (48104). 

of Tish- 

: 44 micro- 

Glossiphonia stag- 

parasitica (48115). 

CLARK, H. Watton, Bureau of Fish- 
eries, Washington, D. C.: 2 plants 
collected in aca and the District 
of Columbia (485380) ; living 
mens of A ee from Piney Branch, 


CLARK, AUSTIN H., Bureau 
eries, Washington, D. C. 
scopic 
nalis and G. 


slides of 


speci- 


D. C. (48668) ; plant, Viola sp., col- 
lected in Maine by W. C. Kendall 
(487138). 


CLEMENS, Rey. Josepu, Fort Douglas, 
Utah: Plants from Mindanao, Phil- 
ippine Islands (48547). 

CLENDENIN, R. H., Martinsdale, 
Specimen of barite (47750). 

COCKERELL, T. D. A., Boulder, Colo.: 
14 insects, including the type of a 
Lepidopteron (48461) ; 11 specimens 
representing 2 species of Hymenop- 
tera (48648); 27 specimens of Dip- 
tera, 6 specimens of Hymenoptera 
and nest-cells of a bee, Anthaphora 
forbesi (48652). (See under 
S. A. Rohwer.) 

Miss M. C., 

2 pieces 


Mont. : 


also 


CoDMAN, 
aCe 
terre 
pieces of pottery 


Washington, 
of lace, point d’Angle- 
Vandyke point, and 5 
(4SS04: loan). 


and 


CoFFIN, SELDEN J., Easton, Pa.: The 
distributing portion of Prof. James 
H. Coftin’s self-recording anemometer 
(47594). 

CoLEMAN, Mr., Old Point Comfort, Va.: 
Piece of anchor rope of the boat in 
which Captain Slocum sailed from 
South America to this country 
(48393). 


76 REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908, 


COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS, 
CoLUMBIA UNIveRSIry. (See under 
New York City.) 

CoLuINs, FRANK S., Malden, Mass.: 50 
specimens of North American algae; 
fascicle xxix of the ‘ Phycotheca 
Boreali-Americana ” of Collins, Hol- 
den, and Satchell (48378) ; 50 speci- 
mens of algae fascicle, 50 of ‘* Phy- 
cotheca Boreali-Americana ” (48902 : 
purchase). 


CoLorAbDO, MUSEUM OF THE UNIVERSITY 
or, Boulder, Colo.: Types of the 
species Acanthoceras  coloradecnse, 
Volutoderma  clatiworthyi, Capulus 
spangleri, Anatina doddsi, and Ser- 
pila markimnani (AS444). 


Couton, H. S., Philadelphia, Pa.: 5 
specimens of Venus mercenaria 
chipped by shells of Mulgur carica 
(48791). 


CoMEAU, NAPoLEon <A., Godbout, Que- 
bee, Cannda: Skin of an albino spec- 
imen of Harelda hyemalis (485838 


COMMERCE AND LABOR, DEPARTMENT OF: 
Bureau of Fisheries: Yishes, mol- 
lusks, and marine invertebrates col- 
lected by the steamer Spray, of Bos- 
ton, during the winter and spring of 
1906-7 (47586) ; a collection of fishes 
from the vicinity of Beaufort, S. C. 
(47593): dragon flies from the Mis- 
sissippi basin, consisting of about 
{00 specimens and representing about 
5O species (48625); 12 plants from 
Jo Daviess: County, Ill, collected by 
Messrs. Bartsch and Clark (47645) ; 
specimen of living cacti, Opuntia, 
from Tennessee, collected by Messrs. 
Bartsch and Clark (477389) ; 2 living 
plants collected in Tennessee by 
Messrs. Bartsch and Clark (47747) ; 
Alaskan salmon, collected by the 
steamer Albatross (47798) ; 5erinoids, 
including 2 types of new species, 
collected by the Albatross (47929) ; 
types and cotypes of new species of 
fishes from Alaska (4798S); TOO 
fishes from the Chester River, near 
Millington, Md.. collected by Messrs. 
Goldsborough and Clark (48018) ; 
jawbones of 2 finback-whale, 72 feet 


COMMERCE AND LABOR, DEPARTMENT 


or—Continued. 
long, killed by Capt. J. S. Nickerson, 
Provincetown, Mass. (48059) ; about 
192 fishes collected on the Pacific 
coast by the steamer Albatross, and 
in Georgia by Charles H. Bollman 
and Bert Fessler, the latter inelud- 
ing the type of Opsopadus bollmani 
(48050) ; type specimen of a Japa- 
nese fish, Caristius japonicus 
(48051); mollusks, fishes, reptiles, 
batrachians, and crayfishes, and a 
specimen of Hemiptera from Devils 
Lake, N. Dak. (48083); skin and 
skull of «a spermophile, Citellis, col- 
lected by E. L. Goldsborough from 
North Chautauqua Grounds, Devils 
Lake, N. Dak. (48085); 201 fishes 
collected in the Lake of the Woods 
and its tributaries in August, 1894, 
by A. J. Woolnan, and 249 fishes 
from Kootenay Lake, British Colum- 
bia, obtained in August, 1898, by 
3. W. Evermann (48099) ; types, co- 
types, and 8 specimens of fishes 
(48100) ; sea-urchins of the family 
Cidaridae, collected by the Albatross 
in 1887-88, 1891, 1900, 1902, 1904-5, 
and 1906, described by Alexander 
Agassiz and Hubert Lyman Clark 
(48153): fishes obtained in Maine 
and elsewhere in New England 
chiefly by W. C. kendall (48171) ; ¢ 
collection of corals collected by the 
Albatross in the northwest Pacific in 
1906 (48285) ; type specimen of dar- 
ter, HHadropterus marinkuchkiensis 
(48313); fishes obtained by W. C. 
Kendall, chiefly in Maine (48520) ; 
6 Japanese fishing boats, viz, 1 
tunny fishing boat (Chiba-ken) ; 
2 bonito fishing boats (Shiznoka- 
ken), and 5 yellow tail fishing boats 
(IKXagoshima-ken ) (48411); ecray- 
fishes from Lake Maxinkuckee and 
vicinity (48422); 5S specimens rep- 
resenting 11 species of crinoids, col- 
lected by the Albatross among the 
Hawaiian Islands in 1902 (48427) ; 
40 type specimens of annelids, col- 
lected in 1900; bryozoans, worms, 
crustaceans, Sponges, tunicates, and 
jellyfishes, collected in 1902 and 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


COMMERCE AND LABOR, DEPARTMENT 
or—Continued. 

1903 in Hawaii and Alaska (48447) ; 
19 lots of holothurians, collected dur- 
ing the Alaska salmon investigations, 
1903 (48492); 92 lots of parasitic 
copepods — from various sources 
(48586) ; ‘specimens of Balanoglos- 
sus from the Woods Hole region 
(48559) ; 2 specimens of pipe-fish, 
Nerophis aequoreus, collected by Capt. 
Henry Eagleton, steamship Trojan 
Prince (48891) ; 118 vials of insects 
and insect larvae, and 8 lots of ma- 
rine invertebrates, collected by field 
parties near Lake Maxinkuckee, Ind. 
(48904); starfishes, holothurians, 
and invertebrates from the North 
Pacific Ocean (48928), 

Comsrock EXTENSION MINING AND 
MILLING COMPANY, Carson City, 
Ney.: Specimen of fossil wood from 
Mount Davidson, Ney. (48041). 


Conrabt, A. F., Clemson College, S. C.: 


Specimen of Alyson sp. (48738). 
ConstTANtT, Oscar, Iberia, Ky.: Cere- 
monial object of banded — slate 


(48701: purchase). 


Conzatti, C., Oaxaca, Mexico: 16 liv- 
ing plants (47624, 47920, 47955, 
48183); 6 specimens of living cacti, 
Hehinocactus manillaria, from 
Mexico (47579); 85 plants (47655, 
47669, 47741, 47879); 2 specimens 
of Jlimosa lacerata (AT6T9) : speci- 
men of living plant, 
(47889); 7 cuttings of Cissus 
(47974); 2 plants of the family 
Cactaceae, from Mexico (48007); 2 
specimens of cacti, Cereus, from 
Oaxaca (48456). 


Cissus sp. 


CooLIpGE, Kart R., Palo Alto, Cal.: 18 
specimens of Lepidoptera (48508). 


CoPeLAND, E. B., Manila, Philippine 
Islands: 180 ferns, mainly from the 
Philippine Islands (48459). 


COPENHAGEN, DENMARK, ZOOLOGICAL 
MusEuUM: 21 specimens representing 
10 species of Echini (48549: ex- 
change), 


77 


COSTENOBLE, H. L. W., Agana, Guam: 
Sling stones, shell implements, mor- 
tars, adz blades, pestle, and shell 
chisels from the island of Guam, 
and shell money from the island of 
Yap (48520: purchase). 

Court, Epwarp J., Washington, D. C.: 
Bird skin, the type of Ardea hero- 
dias treganzae (48606). 

CouRTIS, WILLIAM M., Detroit, Mich.: 
Fern from Nevada (47960). 

Cowrrr, Rey. Freep. C., Woodsville, 
N. H.: Drift bowlders (47906). 

Cox, Miss Eva P., Washington, D. C.: 
Clam basket used by the Clatsop In- 
dians (47808). 

Cox, Miss Hazen VAN Zanpt, Bright- 
wood, D. C.: Young robin, Planes- 
ticus migratorius (AT537). 

CRANDALL, S. W., Syracuse, N. Y.: 
Specimens of walkingstick, Diaphe- 
romera femorata (A4AT791). 

CRANSTON, C. K., Pendleton, Oreg.: 
Young albino salmon, Oncorhynchus 
chowicha ? (47715). 


CRAWFORD, J. G., Albany, Oreg.: Cra- 
nium and fragmentary bones from 
a burial mound in Lincoln County, 
Oreg. (48526). 


CRAWFORD, LAMAR, New York City: 


Stone implements and arrowpoints 
from a mound and cavern near 
Meetze, Fauquier County, Va. 


(47753). 
CrosBy, C. R., Ithaca, N. Y.: 5 Micro- 
lepidoptera (47580). 
CROSS, 
Survey, 


WHITMAN, U. S. 
Washington, D. C.: Litho- 
logical specimens from Shap Fell, 
Westmoreland, England (48019) ; 
corundum from Colorado and sand- 
stone from England (4838038 


Geological 


Curt, Dr. H. C., surgeon, U. 8S. Navy, 
Washington, D. C.: A native shield 


from the interior of Queensland, 
Australia, and a club (langeel) ; 


head of a war club (star shaped) 
from New Guinea; and “ kuditchi” 
shoes from Central Australia, made 


78 


Curt, Dr. H. C.—Continued. 
of felted emu feathers and usually 
blood, and used in ceremonial witeh- 
craft (47861); robin (Planesticus 
migratorius) showing a tendency 
toward albinism (48482). 

Windsor, Onta- 

and an 


Curtis, Miss DeE.t1a, 
Canada: Old melodeon 
old silver watch (48146). 
CusSHMAN, J. A., Boston, Mass.: Crus- 
tacenns from the fresh waters of 
Labrador and Newfoundland, ¢ol- 
lected by Glover M. Allen and Owen 

Bryant (48109), 
CutrcHin, N. E., Baltimore, Md.: 2 
smnill ivory carvings (47605). 


rio, 


Davipson, A., Los Angeles, Cal.: Speci- 
men of Osmorrhiza from California 
(47654): plant from the southern 
part of California (48685). 

Davis BrorurErs, Kent, Ohio.: 2 boxes 
of percussion “ pills”” which were 
extensively used later than guntlints 
and before the invention of pereus- 
sion caps (48485: purchase). 

Davis, CHArRLes A., Thorndale, Tex.: 
Specimen of Iceland spar (48052). 
DAVIS, WILLIAM T., New 
Staten Island, N. Y.: (received 
through Dr. IF. A. Lucas) Batrach- 

jans (47621). 


, 


Brighton, 


Day, Purr, Black Warrior, 
Arrow-shaft straightener (48390). 


Day, RicnHarp H., Philadelphia, Pa.: 
Oriental package of “ strike-a-light ”’ 
flints, with flints and_ steel 
(47862). 


S loose 


Go Gz 
Guatemala 
from 


Bluffton, Ind.: 7 
(47617) ; 
Indiana 


plants 
plant, 
(47922). 


DEAM, 
from 
Laciniaria, 
Hxchange. 

Dean, F. A. W., Cleveland, Obhio.: 
Squid, Loligo pealei, from Marthas 

and 2 specimens 

Siliqua patula nuttalli, 

(47606). 


Vineyard, Mass., 
of 


from California 


shells, 


a ee 3 
nigri- 
Wis. 


DEANE, RUTHVEN, Chicago, 
blackfin 
pinnis, 


(48204). 


whitefish, 
from Green 


Coregonus 
Lake, 


Ariz, :. 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


DEISHER, H. K., Kutztown, Pa.: 9 pho- 
tographs of baskets belonging to Mr. 
Deisher (482538). 

DeLasumuttr, Miss INrEz, Spokane, 
Wash.: Indian paint pot from New 
Mexico (48245). 


DENNETT, JOHN. under John 


Doan.) 


(See 


Dietz, W. G., Hazleton, Pa.: 20 speci- 


mens of Phycitinae (48747: ex- 
change); specimen of Pyla_— bis- 
triatella (AST76); 9 cotypes of 


Microlepidoptera (Ornir) (ATS99). 


DoAN, JOHN, and JOHN DENNETT, Sil- 


verbell, <Ariz.: Lizard, Coleonyx 
variegatus (ATOS2). 
Dosson, Dr. W. H. Yeung Kong, 


Kwang Tung, China: Plant, Drosera, 
from China (48757). 

Dop, FF. H. Wotrrey, Millarville, Al- 
berta, Canada: 6 specimens of Lepi- 
doptera, Hubaphe immaculata (48416), 


Dopar, Byron’ E., Davison, Mich.: 
Stone pipe and grooved stone ax 


(12596: loan). 


Dopncr, C. K., Port Huron, Mich.: 20 
plants from Ontario and Michigan 
(48181); 10 plants from the region 
of Lake Huron (48777). 

DouBLEDAY, MARy, ESTATE OF: Sword 
worn by Gen, Abner Doubleday dur- 
ing the Civil War. (48095). 

DovucLas, JAMES, New York City: 2 
sections of stalactites from caves in 
limestone of the Warren district of 
Arizona (48275). 

Dowpir, S. R., Waiakoa, Hawaiian 


Islands (received through the Bu- 
reau of American Ethnology) : Col- 
lection of Hawaiian ethnological ob- 
jects (12566: loan). 

DoweLtL, Putirp, Port 
N. Y.; 14 ferns from 
New York, and other 
(48853). 


Richmond, 
New Jersey, 
localities 


| Dowiinc, Mrs. Harriet L., Washing- 
ton, D. C.: Areheological and eth- 
nologieal from Mexico 
(486-49 : 


objects 
loan). 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


Drew, Miss Rosa, Grinnell, Iowa: 32 
specimens of plants, Laciniaria, 
from Towa (47871). 

DUBLIN, IRELAND, FISicRIES BRANCH 
OF THE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICUL- 
TURE: Specimen of Scorpaena cristu- 
lata from the western coast of Tre- 
land (48251). 

Ducnaussoy, A., Caudebec-lés-Elbeuf, 
Seine Inférieure, France: S9 speci- 
mens of Hymenoptera (48340: ex- 
change). 

Duptey, J. H., Hoquiam, Wash.: Hy- 
menopterous insect, Sirer albicornis 
(47756). 

DuceEs, A., Guanajuato, Mexico: Skull, 
wing, and leg of a bat, Anoura geof- 
froyi (47619) ; 25 (received 
through the Department of Agricul- 
ture) (47701); lenticular lichens 
from Mexico (48687); 38 plants 
Baileya multiradiata (48848). 

DUMBOLTON, C. J., Mabton, Wash.: 
Fragments of silicified wood from 
near Mabton (48588). 5 

UNIVERSITY COL- 

(48540: loan). 

City, Iowa: 
prehistoric 


insects 


DUNDEE, SCOTLAND, 
LEGE: Crab (Uca) 

DuNLoP, T. W., 
Collection of 
stone objects from near Mason City 
(48029). 

Durant, Miss Lourstana, Washington, 
D. C.: A very interesting collection 
of native utensils and implements 
obtained in South Africa by the 
donor, including a Kaffir piano, or 
Miramba (48879). 

Dury, CHARLES, Cincinnati, 
insects (47672: exchange). 

Dorn TI. Tthaca, N. Y.: 
of Mr. Dutt, a native 
India (47648). 

Dyar, H. G., U. S. National Museum: 
2 specimens of Hymenoptera from 
Tryon, N. C. (47658); 2 specimens 
of Lepidoptera, Sphiner gordius and 
Apatela lanceolaria, bred from lar- 
vae collected in Maine (48767 


Mason 
supposed 


Ohio: 8 


Photograph 
of Calcutta, 


Dyer, Mrs. Frorence M., Washington, 
D. C.: Silver armlet found in an In- 
dian cemetery, Maumee Bay, near 
Toledo, Ohio (12471: loan). 

82065—09 6 


19 


Hastwoop, Miss Auicr, Berkeley, Cal. : 
6 plants, Ribes, collected in Califor- 
nia (48515). 


Epwarps, J. E., Haycreek, Oreg. (re- 
ceived through the Department of 
Agriculture) : 2 specimens of cacti, 
EHehinocactus (47989). 


EXGGLeston, W. W., Cambridge, Mass. : 
65 plants from the northeastern part 


of the United States (4793S: pur- 
chase). 
EGYPTIAN GOVERNMENT, Cairo, Egypt 


(through H. G. Lyons, director-gen- 


eral, survey department, Giza, 
Kgypt): Fossil remains of Arsinoi- 
therium zitteli and other’ species 


(47878); (through the minister of 
education and Dr. G. A. Boulenger, 
of the British Museum of Natural 
History, London, England) 54 species 
of fishes from the River Nile and its 
tributaries (48252). 

IXLBEUF, FRANCE, MUSEE D’HISTOIRE 
NATURELLE: 132 specimens of Hy- 
menoptera (47792: exchange). 


ELDER, H. C., Lester, Ark.: Petroleum 
from Camden, Ark. (48161). 


ELper, THOMAS IL., New York City: 
Collection of tradesmen’s tokens or 


‘store cards” (47789). 


KuLiortT, Mrs. MINNiz J., Washington, 
D. C.: A copy of the Bible printed 
in 1599, silver spoon, giass saltcellar, 
and a tin treasure box of the colo- 


RRs 


nial period (47773). 
IaLLis, Max M., 

Mosquito larvee, 

(47677). 

Evry, Mrs. H. A., Beverly, N. J.: 
Mounted bald eagle, 
Haliaetus leucocephalus, from near 
Philadelphia (48139). 


Winona Lake, Ind.: 
Wyeomyia smithir 


specimen of 


Emmons, Lieut. G. T., U. S. Navy (re- 
tired), Princeton, N. J.: 3 reed 
stalks used as sandpaper by the In- 
dians of southeastern Alaska 
(48527). 

FINNIS, CarL E., Narcrosse, Fla.: Spi- 
der, Gasteracantha cancriformis 
(47865). 


80 


Hpres, Miss Eminty, City Point, Va.: 
Plant from Trinidad, British West 
Indies (48006). 


SSHNAUR, Mrs. W. H., Los Angeles, 


Cal.: 7 specimens of J//aliotis from 
the western coast of Mexico (7) 
(48892). 

ESTACION CENTRAL AGRONOMICA. (See 


under Santiago de las Vegas, Cuba.) 


IEwinc, Herpert S., Artesia, Cal.: 5 


specimens representing 2 
from California 


species of 
Lpipragmoplora 
(48445). 


EXPERIMENT STATION OF THE HAWAIIAN 


SUGAR PLANTERS’ ASSOCIATION (Di- | 
yision of Entomology), WWonolulu, | 
Hawaii: Moths, Cirphis unipuncta, 


Caradrina reculsa, and Cryptolabes 
sp. (48270). 

FALL, H. C., Pasadena, Cal. : 
miens of Cenophengus 
(48SSS1: exchange). 


2 speci- 


debilis 


I'attis, Miss Epwina H., Denver, 
Colo.: 2 mats illustrating samples 
of weaving, and a basket (45210). 

Fawcert, H. §., Gainesville, Fla.: 3 
orchids from Florida (47962). 


Fay, H. W., De Kalb, Ill.: Photo- 
graphs illustrating the exhuming of 
mastodon bones near De Kalb 


(48894). 

Iretr, Dr. EE. P., state entomologist, 
Albany, N. Y.: 5 Japanese tortricids, 
Archips sorbiana (48394). 

A., Pasadena, Cal.: Adult 

and 2 larvae of Plasteros nv. sp. (hear 


ITEnyYeES, Dr. 


sanguinicollis) ; adult and 5 larvae 
of Aphorista morosa from Porvenir, 
N. Mex. (48251) ; 37 specimens rep- 
resenting 11 species é6f Aleocharinae 
(48489) > about 3,000 insects collect- 
ed at Cordoba, Mexico (4SSS5). 


fierRNALD, M. L., Cambridge, Mass, : 122 
plants from Quebec (48424:  pur- 
chase). 

IgerRNEKES, VAL, Milwaukee, Wis.: 12 


speciinens of Lepidoptera (48164). 

i‘ieLtp, G. H., and W. 8S. Wrient, San 
Diego, Cal.: 16 specimens of Lepi- 
doptera (4S7V6). 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908, 


Firtp, Mrs. WILLIAM Dr Y., Matta- 
poisett, Mass.: 3 of the lace- 
wing fly, Chrysopa sp. (47562). 


eggs 


IitLp MusrtumM or NATURAL HIsToryY, 


Chicago, Ill: Plant, Nolina, from 
Mexico (47572: exchange); collee- 


tion of aretic clothing worn by mem- 
bers of the Greely Lelief Expedi- 


tion; also. sleeping bag, canvas 
straps, ete. (47967); frogs from 
Guatemala (48287); 800) plants 
from the United States and the 
West Indies (4855 exchange) ; 
326 specimens of willows, NSalir 


(48451: 
Fink, Prof. Bruce, Oxford, Ohio: 45 


loan). 


lichens from Minnesota (47931); 
125 specimens of Jichens collected 


mainly on Plummers Ishind, Mont- 
gomery County, Md., in 1907 (48504). 

Fintey, JOHN, Dowagiac, Mich.: Moth, 
Bacles imperialis (47581). 

liso, Mrs. NicHoLas, Washington, 
D. C.: Chair brought by Mr. Fish 
from Morro Castle, Cuba, and a 
beaded Indian cane which belonged 
to Sergt. Hamilton Fish (48871); 
flounce of Brabant (Flemish) lace 
(48873: loan). 

Ir'isnerR, Miss M. J., Denton, Md.: 3 
plants from Porto Rico, Guarea 
trichelioides, Jatropha multifida, and 
Zophyranthes % (4ATT90). 


FirzsimMons, F. W., director Port 
Klizabeth Museum, Port Elizabeth, 


Cape Colony, South Africa: 8 pho- 
tographs of skulls of  Layard’s 
beaked whale, Jesoplodon bayardi, 
and one of the exterior (47866). 

I., 
birds’ 


ILEMING, J. 
Canada: 9 


Toronto, Ontario, 
skips from Chat- 


ham Islands (48227: exchange). 
FLeTcHeR, Dr. JAMES, Ottawa, Can- 
ada: Moth, Nymphula obliteralis 


(48521). 

Forrstr, A. F., Dayton, Ohio: About 
4OO specimens of fossil bryozoans il- 
lustrating the Mississippian forma- 

of Kentucky (47885); about 

500 fossils from the same formation 

(48024), 


tions 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


Four, Mary E., Greenville, Ky.: 
Larva of hickory-horned devil, Cith- 
eronia regalis (47612). 

FooreE MINERAL CoMPANY, Philadel- 
phia, Pa.: Specimens of  hydro- 
magnesite from California; eding- 


tonite from Sweden; tapiolite from 
France; and calciovol borthite from 
Colorado (48577: purchase). 

Forp, Dr. W. Huston, Washington, 
D. C.: A 40-pound cannon ball, which 
was fired at a floating battery 
April 12, 1861, by Major Anderson. 
in command or Fort Sumter, Charles- 


ton Harbor (483855). 


on 


Co- 
and 
‘on 5 


FRANKLIN, H. " Amherst, Mass. : 
types of Anthothrips gowdeyi 
Huthrips insularis, mounted 
slides (48162). 


FREBURGER, GEORGE A., Baltimore, Md.: 
Cane cut from a chaparral bush by 
the donor during the war with Mex- 
ico (47816). 

FREEMAN, C. K., 
ole Wy: 


Mindanao, 
(47634). 


Parang, 
Sarcophaga sp. 


FREEMAN, Miss HELEN, New Bedford, 
Mass.: 18 boxes of natural history 
and ethnological specimens, which 
belonged to the late Willard Nye, jr. 
(48696). 

FRENCH, Rev. J. L. and L&on L. 
Washington, D. C.: Historical 
other relics (48686: loan). 

Frierson, L. S., Frierson, La.: 4 speci- 
mens of Lampsilis terasensis from 
Louisiana or eastern Texas (47604). 


lis 
and 


I’rispik, D. G., Norris, Mont.: Magnet- 
ite sand containing monazite 
(48418). 

Frost, ©. <A., South Framingham, 
Mass.: 76 specimens of Lepidoptera 
(47802). 

FULLAWAY, DAvip J., Stanford Univer- 
sity, Cal.: 8 mosquitoes and 2 slides 


of insects from Yosemite Valley, Cal. 
(47640). 

Futon, H. C., Riverside, Kew, Lon- 
don, England: Specimen of Turbon- 
illa from Florida (47705). 

GaBy, C. W., Osceola, Nev.: Lower jaw 
(fossil) of a horse, apparently 
Equus occidentalis (48193). 


81 


GAILLARD, Maj. D. D., U. S. Army, 
Culebra, Canal Zone: Small bag 


woven from a fiber plant, made by 
the Indians of Los Remedios, Proy- 
ince of Chiriqui, Republic of Pan- 
ama (48142). 

GAILLARD, R., Mobile, Ala.: Phyllopod 
crustacean from a hydrant (48298). 


GARDNER, Hon. A. P., House of Repre- 


sentatives, Washington, D. C.: Pho- 
tograph of an Algonquian horn 
spoon, an heirloom in the Gardner 


family of Massachusetts (48036). 


GARRETT, J. J., Lunsford, Ark.: 2 
specimens of the American hercules 
beetle, Dynastes tityus (4AT830). 


GATES, FRANK C., Chicago, Ill.: 300 
plants from Illinois and Wisconsin 


(48240: purchase). 

GEARHART, GEORGE W., Ashland, Pa.: 
eos coal from Schuylkill 
County, (48812). 


Grr, Prof. N. Gist, department of sci- 
Soochow University, Soochow, 
China: Collection of Chinese 
cines, comprising about 500 
(48443). 


ence, 
medi- 
kinds 


GEOLOGICAL SURVEY. (See under Ot- 


tawa, Canada.) 

GIACORNELLI, Dr. EUGENIO, La Rioja, 
Argentina, South Americ: Butter- 
flies from Argentina and Europe 
(48900: gift and exchange). 

Gipson, R. L., Alameda, Saskatchewan, 
Canada: Specimen of Jnoceramus 


sagensis from the Fort Pierre (Upper 
Cretaceous) formation (48793). 


GILBERT, Mrs. A. P., Logan, Okla.: 
Specimen of praying mantis, NStag- 
momantis carolina (4T92T7): speci- 


men of walking stick, Parabacillus 


palmeri (48015). 


GILBERT, CHESTER G., South Bethle- 
hem, Pa.: 476 grams of meteorite 
from Estacado, Tex. (47563: ex- 
change). 

GILLETTE, C. P., Fort Collins, Colo. 
(through Dr. H. T. Fernald) : Type 


of Deromyia pulchra (47985). 


82 


Grrau.t, A, A., Urbana, Ill.: 3 cotypes 
of Tritneptis hemerocampae (Tymen- 
optera) and 4 unnamed specimens 
(48660). 

GopDMAN, If. D., London, England: <A 
set of the beetles from Central Amer- 
ica which were used by the donor 


in connection with kis monumental 
work entitled ‘“ Biologia Centrali 


Americana” (48514) ; T46 specimens 
of Rhynchota and Formicidae from 
Central America, selected from the 
3iologia Centrali collec- 
tions (48598). 


Americana 


R., Fineastle, Va.: Jaw of 
Marmota with 
overgrown incisors (47745). 


Gopwin, I. 
woodchuck, MLONILE, 
GoLL, GrorGE P., Washington, D. C.: 3 
specimens of Pseudomelania obelis- 


cus from Lake Yzabal, Guatemala 
(47SS4); reptiles, 2 fresh-water 
erabs and shells from Guatemala 
(4835908). 
GOTTSCHALK, A. L., United States 
cousul-general, Mexico: 14° picture 
postals representing Mexican eth- 


nological subjects (47647). 
Gowarpb, Gustavus, Washington, D. C.: 


Samoan wedding mat (4SSSS: pur- 
chase). 
GRAHAMSTOWN, CAPE CoLoNy, SouTH 


AFRICA, ALBANY MusEuM: 148 plants 
from South Africa (47696: 
change). 


ex- 


GRAYSON, G. W., Eufaula, Okla.: Pho- 
tographs of Creek Indians (48760). 


GREEN, H. A., Tryon, N. C.: 
of tabular quartz, 
(47758). 


Specimens 
asbestos. and 


shells 


Grecer, D. Ik., Perkins, Okla.: About 
15 species of land and fresh-water 
(48810) ; 38 
specimens, representing G species, of 
land and from 
Oklahoma 


shells from Oklahoma 


fresh-water shells 


(48919). 


GRIDLEY, Mrs. ANN E., Washington, 
D. C.: Silk handkerchief bearing a 


picture of the late Capt. Charles V. 
Gridley, U. S. Navy (48648). 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


Griacs, R. F., Columbus, Ohio: Fern, 
Asplenium pinnatifidum, from Ohio 
(48756). 


GRIMES Pass PLACER MINING COMPANY 
(Limited), Boise, Idaho: Black sand 
(48178). 


GRIMES, WARREN, U. S. National Mu- 
seum: 8 United States 1-cent pieces 
(48781): a silver coin and a copper 
coin (48842). 


GRINNELL, Josepu, Pasadena, Cal.: 
Lizard from California (48044); 12 
bird skins from California (48066) ; 
48 mammals and 295 plants from the 
southern part of California (48539; 
4SG6SG) ; 19 insects (48739). 


Grout, Dr. A. J., Brooklyn, N. Y.: 25 


specimens of mosses (48580: pur- 
chase). 
GUADAGNO, MICHELE, Naples, Italy: 
110) Huropean plants (48452: ex- 
change). 


GULF Brotocic STATION, Cameron, La.: 
5D specimens, representing 8 species, 
of parasitic copepods, and 20 vials 
of decapod and isopod crustaceans 
(48246): 2 specimens of Cumacea 
(48567) : 18 specimens, representing 
2 species, of Schizopods (48451). 


GUTEKUNST, F., Philadelphia, Pa.: 
Photographic portrait of Prof. Jo- 
seph Henry (47995). 


HAARLEM, NETHERLANDS, TEYLER’S Mu- 
seuM: Cast of skull and skin frag- 
ment of Zeuglodon hyudrarchus 
(4851S: exchange). 

Haas, ALBERT, Washington, D. C.: 
Dark lantern used during the civil 
war in Armory Square Hospital, 
Washington, D. CG. (47682). 

HAASE, G., Pasadena, Cal.: Con- 
cretions from the Miocene of San 
Pedro, Cal. (47694); vertebra of a 
fossil whale, and 8 photographs 
(47881). 

HAHN, WALTER L., Mitchell, Ind.: 18 
mammals from near Washington, 
PD. C. (48415: collected for the Mu- 
seum). 


LEO 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


HAInes, ALFRED S., Westtown, Pa.: 96 
plants from Pennsylvania (47551: 
48570). 

HALLIDAY, CHARLES H., contract sur- 
geon, U. S. Army, Manila: 16 in- 
sects from Fort VPikit, Mindanao, 
P. I. (47693). 

HAMLIN, HOoMer, 
Fragments of vertebrate fossils 
(47895); fragments of jaws and 
teeth of a species of camel, prob- 
ably somewhat larger than Came- 
lops kansanus (48014). 

Hancock Musrum. (See under New- 
castle on Tyne, England.) 


(See 


Los Angeles, Cal.: 


Hanpy, L. C. under Otto IL. 


Veerhoff.) 

HANNIBAL, Haroip, San Jose, Cal.: 2 
species of Naiads, Gonidea angulata 
and Anodonta wahlametensis, from 
San Jose (47883); marl containing 
specimens of Bythinella from the 
Pliocene of Santa Clara Valley 
(47969) ; fresh-water shells (48194). 
Santa Clara, Cal.: 

representing 5 spe- 

cies, of marine shells (48920). 


Harpy, Isaac B., 
16 specimens, 


Haran, Mrs. JAMES S., Washington, 
D. C.: Collection of 
enamels, carving, and other art ob- 
jects (48ST9S; 48846). 


embroideries, 


Loan, 
HARPSWELL JABORATORY, Harpswell, 
Me. (through Dr. F. D. Lambert, 
Tufts College, Mass.) : 3 specimens 
of isopod, Idothea metallica, 
Georges Bank (48678). 
Harris, C. M., San Diego, Cal.: 9 
photographs of the elephant seal, 
Macrorhinus angustirostris (47728). 
Harris, Dr. Jesse R., U. S. Army, 
Fort <Assinniboine, Mont.: Set of 
Moro gongs (47542: purchase) ; col- 
lection of Moro ethnological objects 
(47548) ; 21 Moro cartridges (47558). 
Harris, JOSEPH, Tampico, Mexico: 
Skin of Central American mountain 
deer, Mazama sartorii (48269). 
Harris, Dr. J. V., Key West, Fla.: 4 
seorpions (48619). 


from 


83 


Hart, C. A., Urbana, Ill.: 3 specimens 
of isopod, Porcellio sp., from Texas 
(48565). 

Hart, J. H., botanical department, 
Trinidad, British West Indies: Skin 
of a little collared swift, Panyptila 
cayennensis (48792). 

Hassr, Dr. H. E., Sawtelle, Cal.: 
Plant, Crepis, from Arizona (47588) ; 
S specimens of living cacti, Opuntia, 
from California (47799; 47916). 

HAWLEY, W. A., Santa Barbara, Cal.: 
7 specimens of Pecten bellus from 
the Pliocene, 4 miles west of Santa 
3arbara (48132). 

Hay, W. P., Washington, D. C.: Tree 
toads from Dorchester County, Md. 
(47600). 

HAYDEN, Dr. F. V., ESTATE oF (through 
Dr. A. C. Peale): Rocks and verte- 
brate fossils (48277). 

HEDGEMAN, EpGar B., Berwyn, 
Larva of a hag moth (47684). 

HEDLEY, CuARLES, Australian Museum, 
Sydney, New South Wales: About 
125 specimens, representing 84 spe- 
cies, of marine shells from Masthead 
Island, Queensland, mostly cotypes 
of species described by the donor 


Md.: 


(48481). 
Heiter, A. A., Los Gatos, Cal.: 470 
plants from California (47636 ; 


48057) ; 29 plants, Ribes, from Cali- 
fornia (48479: purchase). 


HENDERSON, Hon. JOHN G., Lake View, 
Ill.: Stone object from Illinois, 
known as a * boat anchor” (48841). 

Henry, The Misses, Washington, D. C.: 
4 Indian pictures by Stanley, and 1 
by an unknown artist (48404). 


HensHaw, H. W., Washington, D. C.: 
6 ferns from Massachusetts (47930) ; 
3 birds’ California 
(48888 ). 


nests from 


HERDMAN, Dr. W. A., Liverpool, Eng- 
land: Cotypes of parasitic copepods 
from the pearl Ceylon 
(48544). 


banks of 


84 


Herrera, A. L., Mexico, Federal Dis- 
trict, Mexico: 38 species of land 
shells from Mexico (47897). 

Herrick, Glenn W., Agricultural Col- 
lege,  Miss.: Plant, Viburnum, 
(48279) ; 4 adults and 38 larve of a 


Hymenopteron, Lophyrus pinetum, 
(48450). 
Herriot, W., Galt, Ontario, Canada: 


41 plants collected in Canada during 
1906 (48566). 

Hetu, Miss NANNIEF RANDOLPH, Wash- 
ington, D. C.: China and cut glass- 
ware used at Mount Vernon by Gen- 
eral and Mrs. Washington (12549: 
loan). 

Heyer, Greorce G., New York City: 85 
ethnological specimens from differ- 


ent sections of the United States 
and Ganada (4831S: exchange). 
Hipss, W. C., Washington, D. C.: 


Specimen of Corydalis cornuta from 
Washington, D. GC. (48897). 
HINKLEY, A. A., Dubois, [ll.: 6 cotypes 
of Pyrgqulopsis n. 
(48174). 
Xa; 
representing 
from 


wabashensis sp. 

HIRASE, 
mens, 
land shells 
purchase). 


Kioto, Japan: 272 
56 


Japan 


speci- 
species, of 
(489138: 


Hircuines, BE. F., Augusta, Me.: 2 co- 
COONS of Halesidota maculata 
(4785S). 

Hirtincer, Sergt. J. J., Exposition 


Station, Jamestown, Va.: Nails from | 


a house built in Virginia in 1640 


(47851). 


Hopson, Mrs. Enizapetn C., Washing- | 


ton, D. C.: 2 yards of Mechlin lace 
(1800) and a piece of -point de Mi- 
lan (48802: loan). 

Col. Flagstaff, 
Aviz.: 2 specimens of cactus, Opun- 
tia from Arizona 
(48828) ;.5 specimens of cacti from 
(48883). 


HOocHDERFFER, GEORGE, 


echinocarpa, 


Arizona 
Hoce & McDowetr, Washington, D. C.: 

Partridge, in 

abnormal plumage (48545); a goose 
of unusunl size (48555). 


Colinus virginianus, 


are 
ess 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


HonicomMs, BENTON, Simsbury, Conn.: 5 
specimens, representing 2 species, of 
fresh water shells (48439). 

Hoxiuistrr, N., Delaware, Wis.: 10 
specimens of Nymphaeaceae from 
Wisconsin (47702). 

IlouM, Trreopor, Brookland, D. C.: 14 
plants from Vermont and the vicin- 
ity of Washington, D., C. (47602) ; 
S plants (47710; 47770); 5 plants 
from near Brookland (47876); tu- 
bers of Dioscorea illustrata, culti- 
vated at Brookland, D. C. (47961) ; 
90 specimens of Wuropean plants, 
Umbelliferae, Crassulaceae, and Jun- 
cacene (47792: exchange) ; alcoholic 
material of 8 species of plants from 
Florida and Washington (48259); a 
jar of plants from the District of 
Colunnbia (48665); 5 plants, Den- 


taria diphylla, from Vermont 
(48752). 
Hotmes, J. S., Washington, D. C.: 


Double-headed shake from Kentucky 
(48084). 
Tiorpr GARDENS, 
Jamaica.) 
Hopkins, A. C., Charlestown, W. Va.; 
Leat beetle, Jonocesta coryli (AT7T23). 


(See under Kingston, 


TlorNor, SAMUEL STOCKTON, Carnes- 
ville, Ga.: Arrow point from near 
Dobb’s Bridge, Franklin County, Ga. 
(48065 ). 


Houcu, E. C., Falls Church, Va.: 
' Specimen of fasciated Rudbeckia 
hirta (ATG659). 


U. S. National Mu- 
seum: Plaster cast, painted, of the 
bust of a boy. Replica by August 
Gerber, of Cologne, of the terra cotta 
original by Luca dela Robia, 1400- 
1482 (48120). 


| HoucH, WALTER, 


Towarp, I. O., Department of Agri- 
culture, Washington, D. C.: 190 
named specimens of Muropean Hy- 


menoptera, comprising SG species 
(4SSG65 ). 

Ilowarp Universrry. Medical School, 
Washington, D. C.: Anatomical 


specimens (48255), 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


Howe.t., E. E., Washington, D. C.: 
Piece of meteoric iron from Wil- 


liamstown, Ky. (gift), and a piece of 
a meteorite from Ainsworth, Nebr. 
(exchange) (48482) ; 2,270 grams of 
the Crab Orchard meteorite (48925: 
purchase). 

HrpuicKa, Dr. Atrs, U. 8S. National 
Museum: Bird’s nest (47635). 

Hugsy, Miss Evia F., Pasadena, Cal.: 
Photographs of baskets and samples 
of basketry stitches made by a Pomo 
Indian (48305). 

HuGHES, Mrs. FLorENcE A., Washing- 
ton, D. C.: Singing house mouse, 
Jlus museulus (48554). 


HUNGARIAN NATIONAL MUSEUM. 
under Budapest, Hungary.) 
HuNGATE, J. W., Cheney, Wash.: 9 
specimens of Coleoptera (47614). 


(See 


Hunt, J. B., Topeka, Kans.: Ores and 
fossil invertebrates from Kansas and 
Missouri (48593). 

HUNTER, Chay, Blue, Ariz.: Skin and 
skull of shrew, craw- 
fordi (ATST7T); “white - footed” 
mouse, or “ deer mouse,” Peromyscus 
boylii rowleyi (48225). 


Notiosorex 


HourtTer, JULIvuS, St. Louis, Mo.: Rep- 
tiles and batrachians from Arizona 
and New Mexico (47820) ; salaman- 
der from Stone County, Mo. (47998) ; 


reptiles and batrachians chiefly 
from Arizona and New Mexico 
(48055); frog from California 
(48788). 

INGHAM, Mrs. HE. C., San Fernando, 
Cal.: Living cactus, Opuntia, 
(48324). 

InscHo, SAMUEL S., Elmira, N. Y.: 
Fossil invertebrates from East 


Bethany, N. Y. (48200). 


INSTITUTO DE MANGUINHOS. 
under Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.) 


(See 


INSTITUTO SERUMTHERAPICO DO ESTADO 


DE SAo PauvuLo. (See under Sao 
Paulo, Brazil.) 
INSTITUTO Merpico NAcIoONAL (See 


under Mexico, Mexico.) 


85 


INTERIOR, DEPARTMENT OF: 

Patent Office: Firearms, models 
of various inventions, ete. (48865) ; 
models relating to the history of 
photography (48866) ; models relat- 
ing to the development of musical 
instruments (4SSS9); models relat- 
ing to the development of lighting 
and heating (48890). 

U.S. Geolegical Survey: Collection 


of surveying instruments, obsolete 
forms (47786); 2 aluminum bench- 


mark tablets (48098); vertebrate 
fossils from the Red Beds of Texas, 
collected by Messrs. Adams and UI- 
rich (48151); fossils 
from the Upper and 
Lower Eocene (Puerco and Wa- 
satch) from the Juan basin, 
New Mexico, collected by J. H. Gard- 
ner (48154); rocks from the Brack- 
ett, Uvalde, and Austin quadrangles 
of Texas, collected by T. Wayland 
Vaughan and associates (48286) ; 38 


vertebrate 
Cretaceous 


San 


Hymenoptera, yellow jacket, and 
parasitic worms (48243); fossil 


bones of the Miocene age from Los 
Angeles, Cal. (48291); rocks col- 
lected by E. S. Bastian from the 
Fox Islands, and illustrative of the 
Penobscot Bay folio (488357) ; instru- 
ments used by the Western Re- 
sources branch of the survey in the 
work of measuring the flow of 
streams (48341); vertebrate fossils, 
chiefly obtained in 1907 
by field parties in Wyoming, Mon- 
tana, and North Dakota (48345) ; 
sample of halloysite from Indiana 


Mesozoic, 


(48369); 3 varieties of an extinct 
bison, and an astragalus of ele- 
phant, probably Hlephas  columbi, 


and apparently Pleistocene, collected 
by C. E, Siebenthal near Duenweg, 


Joplin district, Missouri (48587) ; 
rocks and thin sections from the 
Rockland quadrangle, Maine, col- 


lected by Edson 8S. Bastin (48400) ; 
types of 10 new species and 1 new 
variety of Carboniferous inverte- 
brate fossils (48500) ; and 
duplicate rocks and ores, with thin 


reserve 


86 


INTERIOR, DEPARTMENT OF—Continued. 
sections, from the Coeur d'Alene dis- 
trict, Idaho (48545); 75 specimens 
of typical rocks of the Redding 
quadrangle, California, and 60 thin 
sections, collected by J. S. Diller 
ASST): meerschaum from the Dor- 
sey deposit in the canyon of Bear 
Creek, Grant County, N. Mex., col- 
lected by, Douglas B. Sterrett 
(48681) ;rock slab with undetermined 
fucoids, from Glade Run, Warren 
quadrangle, Pennsylvania, collected 
by Mr. Charles Butts (48698) ; nat- 
ural cast of chimaeroid egg case, col- 
lected by N. H. Darton, in 1906, 
from the lower sandstone of Montana 
formation 20 miles from Laramie, 
Wyo. (48730) ; about 20 drawers of 
Paleozoic graptolites (48755); 2 
yertebree of a fossil reptile collected 
by GC. TI. Gordon in the Upper Cre- 
taceous, 2 miles north of Washing- 
ton, Ark. (48852); bryozoans from 
New Hanover and Brunswick coun- 
ties, N. C. (48887). 

a 
bones 


Reclamation Service: Wossil 
while excavating 
in connection with the Umatilla pro- 
ject, and at Cold Springs 


Dam 


discovered 


Oregon, 
(47765). 

NOBeRT, Ariz.: Ari- 
Hlaps euryran- 


INTRAM, 
zona coral snake, 
thus, (48054). 


Signal, 


York 
Virginia 


ISHAM, CHARLES Brapirey, New 
City: 8 birds’ 


(4SS17). 


skins from 


Wash- 


Rock specimens from 


ISTHMIAN CANAL COMMISSION, 
ington, D...C.: 
the Isthmus of Panama, collected by 
Mr. Ilowe, geologist of the Commis. 

sion (47591: exchange). 
Mrs. 


Collection of 


JAMES, JULIAN, 


D'0.3 


Washington, 
laces (4STO9) ; 
Italian, 
chinaware, minia- 
tures, and other art objects (48822; 
loan). 


collection of French, Dres- 


den, and other 


JAMES, OLIN 'T., St. Louis, Mo.: Game 


of national history (57 cards) and 
a book of rules for playing the 


game (47726). 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


JAMESTOWN ‘'TERCENTENNIAL JPXPOST- 
TION, U. S. GOVERNMENT Boarp: 
Models of the Savannah, Clermont, 
and Phoenix, a primitive sledge, and 
a farm sled; 2 models of railway 
tracks 


and 2 models of Starr car- 
bines (4S7S3 
JARDIN BOTANIQUE DE L’EtTat. (See 


under Brussels, Belgium.) 

JENNEY, CHARLES E., Fresno, Cal.: 4 
Coleoptera (47570); G species of 
marine shells from the West Indies 
and the Indo-Pacific region (47584) ; 
5 species of Coleoptera and Hemip- 
tera (47714) ; 11 species of land and 
marine shells (48505); specimen of 
Nassa from the Fiji Islands (48620) ; 
2 specimens of Hymenoptera, Bom- 
bus sp. (48790). 

JENNINGS, A. H., Ancon, Canal Zone, 
vanama: About 275 specimens of 
mosquitoes (48838). 

JEWETT, STANLEY G., Portland, Oreg.: 
Bat, JI/yotis lucifugus  longicrus; 
young wood rats, Neotoma; lizard, 

undulatus occidentalis ; 

snake, Charing pliumbea; skulls of 
common eat, Melis domestica, and 

a spotted skunk, Spilogale phenar 

latifrons; 2 Lutreola 

(47762) ; skins and skulls of 5 mam- 

mals (47925); 6 skins and skulls of 

and Wash- 


Scecloporus 


minks, vison 


mammals from Oregon 


ington (48056). 


JoHnson, C. H., Exposition Sta- 
tion, Norfolk, Va.: An ancient 
corn pounder from Massachusetts 


(47611). 

Jounson, H. L., Clarksville, Tenn.: 
5 flint implements from Wentucky 
and Tennessee (45484: exchange). 

Jones, F. <A., Washington, D. C.: 
Specimen of a star-nosed mole, Con- 
dylura cristata (48656). 

Jones, FRANK Morron, Wilnington, 
Del.: 2 cotypes of Callosamia angu- 
lifera var. carolina, with their co- 
coons (48676). 

Jones, GILBERT, Pittston, Pa.: Speci- 
men and a thin section of middle- 
tonite (47592). 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


JONES, JOSEPH W., Bristol, Tenn.: 2 
plugs of Sally Lund tobacco, manu- 
factured in Richmond by A. W. Tay- 
lor (47807). 

JonEs, Marcus E., Salt Lake City, 
Utah: Specimen of cactus, Opuntia, 
from Utah (48022) ; 31 living plants 
from Utah (48060, 48827); 3 speci- 
mens of living cacti, Opuntia fra- 
gilis, from Sandy, Utah (48680). 

Stanford Uni- 

fishes from 


JORDAN, DAVID STARR, 
versity, Cal.: 5 fossil 
Ceara, Brazil (48915). 

JouTeL, Louis H., New York City: 
17 specimens of J/gnotus aenigmaticus 
(48364 : exchange). 

Jouy, Mrs. M. 8S. F., U. S. National 
Museum: Birds collected by the late 
Pierre L. Jouy, chiefly in the United 
States (48148); stone implements 
and a plaster mold of an archeologi- 
cal object (48872 

JUSTICE, DEPARTMENT OF: A collection 
of the scalps, skulls, and antlers of 
the American elk from the Jackson 
Hole region, Wyoming, used as evi- 
dence in a federal trial against 
poachers in September, 1907 (48821). 

KeARrOTT, W. D., Montelair, N. J.: 
Tortricids, representing large types 
of new species (48567); 4 cotypes 
of prionapterygid crambids (48748) ; 
20 specimens of Lepidoptera, cotypes 
of G new species (48816). 

KEEN, J. H., Metlakatla, British Co- 
lumbia: Indian skull from Iama- 
nawal, British Columbia (47913). 

KEENAN, MICHAEL, Springer, N. Mex 
15 pseudo-scorpions, Chelifer can- 
croides, (47934); a louse mouse, 
Mus musculus, and a house sparrow, 
Passer (48048). 

KELLERMAN, W. A., Los Amates, Gua- 
temala, Central America : of 
eacti (48580). 


Mrs. LAuRA Swine, Wash- 
ington, D. C.: 94 animal sculptures 
in plaster and bronze, by Edward 
Kemeys (48170: loan). 


domesticus 


Seeds 


IKKEMEYS, 


IKKENKEL, Louis V., 
Star-nosed mole, 
(47590). 


Muskegon, Mich. : 
Condylura cristata 


| 


87 


KENNEDY, P. B., Reno, Nev.: 349 
plants from Nevada (48325: ex- 
change); 51 plants, Ribes (48867: 
loan). 

KENT, JOSEPH G., Tuba, Ariz.: Sam- 


ples of cotton, with stems and roots 


cultivated by the Hopi Indians 
(48117). 

KERN, D. N., Allentown, Pa.: Stone 
implements from a quarry near 
Vera Cruz, Lehigh County, Pa., 
with eee ah a printed de- 
seription (47727); arrow points, 
(47924). 

KEW, Lonpon, ENGLAND, Roya Bo- 


A frond from the 
type specimen of . eh nium finekii 
from Mexico (48031 6 fragments 
of type specimens rs plants, Dalea 
(48546: exchange). (See under Cal- 
cutta, India.) 


TANIC GARDENS: 


KitMer, F. B., New Brunswick, N. J.: 
Ethnological objects from various 
localities, and a sponge with oyster 
shells attached (48604). 

I’., National City, 
specimens of fern, 
from Cali- 


IIMBALL, LAURA 
Cales LO living 
Asplenium vespertinum, 
fornia (48509). 

Kine, A. F. A., Washington, 
Furnace slag (48157). 


D.C. 


IXINGSTON, JAMAICA, DEPARTMENT 
PUBLIC GROUNDS AND PLANTATIONS, 
Hore GARDENS: Fern from Jamaica 
(48471: exchange). 


OF 


KINGSTON, ONTARIO, CANADA, Queen’s 
University : 224 plants from Canada 
(48352: exchange). 


IXNAB, FREDERICK, Department of Agri- 
culture, Washington, D. C.: 58 
specimens of — insects (47682 
specimen of Coleoptera, 11. speci- 
mens of Orthoptera, and about 20 

of Lepidoptera (48219: 

collected for the Museum): 17 

specimens of Hemiptera and 49 of 

Hymenoptera (47880); 9 hymenop- 

terous parasite of Parasa sp. from 

Cordoba, Veracruz, Mexico (48627). 
A., Baden, Germany: 40 

Cyperaceae and Juncaceae 

exsiccatae (47709: exchange). 


cocoons 


IXNEUCKER, 
plants, 


88 


REPORT OF 


KNIGHT, HILLES 
al. : Tooth 
Mirounga angustirostris 
the mouth of Gualala 
(47914). 


Ape 
of a 


San Francisco, 
sea-elephant (7), 
(7), from 
River, Cal. 


IKNY-SCHEERER COMPANY, New York 
City: 2 specimens of Lepidoptera, 
Maroga sctiotricha, from Queensland, 
Australia (45462). 

KONIGL. ZOOLOGISCHES MUSEUM. 
under Berlin, Germany.) 


(See 


Korostowrrz, WLADIMIR, Station Ra- 


doule, Propriety Peressage, Goyern- 
ment of Tchernigof, Russin: Frag- 


mentary specimens of Iourgan pot- 
tery (48901: exchange). ° 


Krantz, Dr. F., Bonn, 
About 2,500 specimens, 
419 
and brachiopods (48116: 


Germany : 
representing 
trilobites 


species, of Paleozoic 


exchange). 


Krerrt, H., Paddington, New South 
Wales, Australia: Photograph of a 
diamond snake from Australia 


(47557). 


KUEHLING, J. H., Mount Vernon, Va.: 
Snake, Diadophis, from Virginia 
(48758). 

Kunze, R. E., Phoenix, Ariz.: 2 
mens of living cactus, Opuntia, from 

(47625); 5 specimens of 


speci- 


Colorado 


cactus, Opuntia lunzei, from <Ari- 
zona (47680); specimen of living 
cactus, Opuntia lunzei, from <Ari- 
zona (47731); specimen of cactus, 
ee naas chloratica, from Arizona | 
(47806): beetle, Jlacrobasis ochrea | 
(47854); a living plant, Stylophyl- 


lum, from California (47962): 4 
eacti, Opuntia, from Arizona (48229 


Lacey, HWowarp, Kerrville, Tex.: 7 
skulls of mammals (47855) : 
of Mamillaria 
Hehinocereus 
gray 
Apache squirrel, Sciurus apache, and 
Gila) chipmunk, Mutamias 
(48114). 


speci- 
heyderi and 
(48110) ; 
durangi, 


mens 
ceaes pilosa 
squirrel, = Scirus 


dorsalis 


LAMB, Dr. D. S., Army Medical Mu- 


seum, Washington, D. C.: 2 skeletons 
and a brain (48101) ; deformed skull | 


NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


LAMB, Dr. D ‘ontinued. 
of an unknown Indian, and the brain 
of a white man (48233) ; anatomical 
specimen (48316) ; anatomical speci- 
men (48589). 


LANKESTER, C. H., San José, Costa 
Rica (through William Schaus) : 
collection of insects, chiefly Coleop- 
tera, from the Atlantic slope of Costa 
Rica (47781). 


Larricu, Ek. P. &., Huachuea Siding, 
Ariz.: Gila monster, Heloderma hor- 
ridwm, from Mexico (48321). 


LAUSANNE, SWITZERLAND, BOTANICAL 


MUSEUM OF THE UNIVERSITY: 310 
plants from Central Europe and 


Mediterranean countries (4805S; ex- 
change). 

LAWTON, Fritz HAMILTON, Rincon An- 
tinio, Oaxaca, Mexico: Hemipteron, 
Leptoglossus dilaticollis (48348). 


LAy, Mrs. RicHarp G., Washington, 
ID. C.: 14 pieces of antique art tex- 
tiles, including 9 boxes (4SSO7: 


loan). 


LEE, WILLIS T., U. S. Geological Sur- 
vey, Washington, D. C.: Sample of 
halotrichite from Blossom mine, near 
Cedaredge, Colo. (48040). 


LEEDS, Mrs. EmMity L., Roxbury, Mass.: 
Blue china fruit dish and platter 
(12584: loan). 


Yr 


Lrorr, J. N., envoy extraordinary and 
minister plenipotentiary from Haiti, 


Washington, DPD. C.: 104 models of 
Haitian fruits and vegetables 
(4SS54). 

Le Harpy, J. C., contract surgeon, 
U. S. Army, Savannah, Ga.: Skin 
and 2 skulls of tamarao; skin and 7 


skulls of Philippine deer; skin of a 


crocodile (47722). 


LerBerG, J. B., Leaburg, Oreg.: Speci- 
men of moss from Arizona (48250). 


LEIPZIG, GERMANY, STADTISCHES Muvu- 
SEUM FUR VOLKERKUNDE: Collection 
of ethnological material from Togo 
and Senegambia, Africa (48585: ex- 
change). 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


LELAND STANFORD JUNIOR UNIVERSITY, 
Stanford University, Cal.: 2 speci- 
mens of Rimicola muscarum, col- 
lected by Dr. Harold Heath at Pa- 
cific Grove, Cal. (48069); crabs, 
Cancer antennarius, C. jordani and 
C. gibbosulus (48384); types and 
cotypes of fishes from Japan, Mex- 
ico, California, and the Philippine 
Islands (48469); fishes from Japan, 
Hawaii, California, and other lo- 
ecalities (48924). 

Utrecht, Hol- 

Pilocercus 

(48835). 

Colegio de Ja Salle, 

Cuba: 380 Cuban 


LENS, Miss ALBERTINE, 
land: 8 specimens of 
lanuginosus from Curacao 

Leon, Brother, 
Vedado, Habana, 
ferns (48516). 

LEONARD, AuGust, Batavia, 

4 ‘ - 
small arrewpoints (48301). 


ATkK.i 3 


LE SovEr, W. H. D., director, geolog- 
ical survey, Melbourne, Australia : 
Stone hatchet from a shell kitchen- 
midden near Sorento, Victoria 
(477638: exchange). 

Lewis, A. E., jr., Washington, D. C.: 
Centipede from Arkansas (47717). 
LEwis, Benton, U. S. National Mu- 
seum: 5 specimens of living cacti 
cultivated in Washington, D. C. 

(47687). 

Lewis, Lieut. Greorcre C., U. S. Army, 
Mindanao, P. I.: 2 skulls of monkeys, 
Macaca, 5 shells and 7 acorns from 
Lake Lanao, Mindanao (48658). 

LINTON, EpwiIn, Washington, PTa.: 
Types and cotypes of parasites of 
sermuda fishes (48087). 


LITTRELL, C. F., Austin, Nev.: Speci- 
men of cactus, Opuntia polyacantha 
(48136). 


x 


Luioyp, F. E., Tueson, Ariz.: 48 living 
specimens of Mexican cacti (48667) ; 
2 specimens of living cacti, J/amil- 
laria thurberi, from Arizona 
(48697). 

Lioyp, Mrs. K., Richmond, Va.: Piece 
of ticking showing natural feather- 
ing from long use (48289). 

Lopine, H. P., Mobile, Ala.: 6 speci- 
mens of Coleoptera (48626). 


89 


LONDON, ENGLAND, British MusrEUM 
oF NATURAL History: 95 Orthoptera 
(48173: exchange). 

Loprz, JosEPH O., Maynard, Md.: In- 
terhaemal bone of a spade-fish, Chae- 
todipterus faber (48053). 

Lorine, Mrs. MALEK A., Chicago, Il: 
Remington revolver, holster, and 
belt, formerly owned by Mr. Loring, 
1862-1907 (47923). 

LOUNSBURY, CHARLES P., government 
entomologist, Cape Town, South 
Africa: G6 bees (47745). 

Love, Rosperr E., Erwin, Tenn.: Stone 
implements (4SSOS). 

LOVELL, F. H., & Co., Arlington, N. J.: 
A Hiteheock lamp (48875). 

LOVETT, EpwarbD, Croydon, England: 2 
specimens of fishing gear from the 
coast of Galway, Ireland (48098) ; 
set of Maundy money, 1908 (48688: 
exchange). 

Lower, Frep. B., Melrose Highlands, 
Mass.: 18 mosquitoes, Aedes canta- 
tor (48768). 

Mrs. JAMES, Washington, 
D. C.: Oil painting entitled ‘ Cross- 
ing the Ferry,” by Adrien Moreau. 
Presented in memory of her father, 
Lucius Tuckerman (485382). 

Luptow, Miss C. S8., Washington, 
D. C.: 18 insects from the Philip- 
pine Islands (48646). 

Lyon, Marcus W., jr., U. S. National 
Museum: 2 photographs of a Philip- 
pine water buffalo, Bos  bubatlis 
(48405). 

Lyon, Dr. MartHa M. B., Washington, 
D. C.: Anatomical specimen (48304). 

Lyons, H. G. 
Government. ) 

MacDoveaL, D. T., Tucson, Ariz.: T 
specimens of living cacti from New 
Mexico and Arizona (47740); 10 
specimens of cacti (47769) ; 2 speci- 
mens of Agave from  <Arizona 
(48834). 

McComp, GrorGce T., Lockport, N. Y.: 
Niagaran fossils from the western 
part of New York (48026: ex- 
change), 


LOWNDES, 


(See under Egyptian 


90 


Capt. FrRanK R., U. S. Army. 
rabbit, U.S. 


McCoy, 
(See under Col. Ik. B. 
Army.) 


McDonatp, J. M., Globe, Ariz.: Speci- 
men of western hercules beetle, 


Duynastes grantii (48121). 
McE.LuHoskr, Henry, St. Louis, Mo.: 150 
specimens of Porto Rican Lepidop- 


tera (48107: exchange). 
McGer, Mrs. AnitA NeEwcome, Wash- 
ington, D. C.: Vase from a Korean 


tomb 
McGuire, 


(48502: loan). 

J. D., Washington, D. C.: 
Sash of a Creek Indian (48102) ; 
war horn made from an African ele- 
phant’s tusk (48292). 

McNavuGHTON, GEORGE A., San Marcos, 
Vex.: Skull of an alligator, Alligator 
mississippicnsis, from near San Mar- 


cos (487355). 


Mackir, Davin B., Washington, D. C.: 
10 birds’ skins from 
ties (47724); 


rte magna 


various locali- 
meadow lark, NStur- 


(48514). 


MACKINTOSH, JAMES, Deer Isle, Me.: 
Specimen of rhodochrosite and a 
sample of rock from Deer Isle 
(47859; 48501). 

Macoun, JoHn, Ottawa, Canada: 


Snake, Natrirc, from Canada (47986) ; 
154 specimens of (48480 : 
purchase). 
MA; FF. P. 
Johns Hopkins 
more, Md.: 
(48410). 
MALLET, J. W., 
Specimen of silica 


WMOSsSes 


Anatomical Laboratory, 
University, 
Anatomical specimens 
Charlottesville, Va.: 
and of fur- 
nace graphite (47574). 

Oak Station, Pa.: 
GT specimens of  Microlepidoptera 
(48449). 


one 


MARLOFF, F'RED., 


MarsH, G. E., Colo.? 3 
living plants from Colorado (47774). 


Georgetown, 


MARSHALL, ERNEST B., Laurel, Md.: 
Skin and skull of a weasel, Putorius, 
and 4 skulls of mink, Zutreola, 
(48177); shrew (48195): 38 mice, 
JMicrotus pinetorum, Ml. pennsylvani- 
Cus and Peromyscus leucopus 


(48222); fishes, Hsor americanus, 


Balti- | 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


MARSHALL, ERNEST B.—Continued. 
Le reticulatus, Aphredoderus saya- 
nus and Lrimyzon oblongus (48819). 
MARSHALL, GEorGE, U. S. National Mu- 
seum: Cicada-killer, Sphecius spe- 
ciosus (47784): skin and skull of 
swamp rabbit, Linnolagus, pee Til- 
lery, Halifax County, N. C. (48228) ; 
mounted group of tee (48371: 
purchase). 
Viates 
and shoulder 


MARSHALL, Miss May, Page, W. 
Old gold-broecade skirt 


piece, which belonged originally to 
Kleanor Bowles Gooch, of Virginia 


(48828: loan). 

MarvVIN, Dr. M. F., contract surgeon, 
U. S. Army, Fort Mansfield, R. IL: 
Tchneumonid, Lanpronota americana 
(4781S). 


Mason, ©. S., Jonesboro, Tenn. : Photo- 
graph of prehistoric stone objects 
(47936). 

MAxXon, SAMUEL A., Oneida, N. Y.: 15 


living acuta 


(48578). 

May, Miss AuMA, Washington, D. C.: 
Ege shell filled with plaster of Paris 
(48421). 

MAYNARD, Henry W., Ketchikan, Alas- 
ka: Plant, glabra 
(47857). 

N.S., [stacion Agronémica Cen- 

Santiago de Cuba: 

fulgens 

of Cuban land 


plants, Hepatica 


Boschniakia 


Mayo, 
tral, 
S specimens of 
(47597); 9 species 
shells (47649). 


las Vegas, 
Succined 


Mrap, O. P., West Salisbury, Vt.: 
Snapping beetle, Alaus  oculatus 
(47583). 

Mearns, Dr. KE. A., U. S. Army, Manila, 
Philippine Islands: A large collee- 
tion of zoological, ethnological, and 
geological specimens from the Phil- 


ippine Islands (47782) ; 2 rain coats 


from Batan Island, opposite South 
Formosa (47867); 17 bird skins 


from the Philippine Islands (48077) ; 
collection of ethnological and = nat- 
ural history specimens from the 
Philippine Islands (481384).. (See 
under Dr. Pascoe and Maj. John R. 
White.) 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


MerrcuHant, Miss M., Robert Lee, Tex. : 
Hen’s egg, nearly spherical in shape 
(48541). 


Merrick, FRANK A., New Brighton, 
Pa.: 69 specimens of Lepidoptera 
(48062). 

MERRILL, ELMER D., Manila, P. I.: 
Piece of Mandaya cloth from Min- 
danao (47664). 

MERRILL, GEORGE TP., U. S. National 


Museum: Glazed tile and fragments 
of pottery from Armenia (48409). 

Miss H. B.: About 
reptile, shells, and nuts 


MERRILL, 500° in- 
ee a 
8271). 
Pe. R. L., Lambton Quay, Wel- 
lington, New Zealand: Diatomaceous 


and foraminiferous earths from the 


Oamaru district, New Zealand 
(48372). 
Mexico, City or, MExico; INSTITUTO 


Mepico NacronaL: Leaf-base of Ma- 


guéy Agave sp., attacked by a fun- 
gus (47567); seeds from Mexico 
(48075: exchange). 


Meyrick, Epwarp, Thornhanger, Marl- 
borough, England: 80 specimens of 
Lepidoptera, cotypes of East Indian 
species (48429); 29 specimens of 
Microlepidoptera (48600) ; 21 speci- 
mens of Australian Microlepidoptera 
(48769). 


MicHarEuis, Lieut. OtTHo E., U. S. 
Army, Cienfuegos, Cuba: 12 sponges 
from Bahia de Cochinos (47707). 


Mites, CHARLES, Greenriver, Utah: 3 
larvee of a fly, Hristalis (47544). 

MILLER, Dr. G. Brown, Washington, 
D. C.: Anatomical specimen (48557). 


MILLER, Rev. JouN, Wayne, Pa.: Poi- 
soned arrows from Africa (48396). 


Mitter, Miss Mary F., Washington, 
D. C.: 75 plants from the northeast- 
ern part of the United States 
(48553); 15 plants, Botrychium, 
from New York and Vermont 
(48601); 2 specimens of plants, 
Tiarella cordifolia, from Maryland 
(48745). 


91 


Miniter, ZAcK, The 101 Rench, James- 
town Exposition, Va.: Collection of 
implements from an Indian mound 
on the James River (47699); hide 
and skeleton of an American buffalo, 
Bison bison (A4ATT5T). 

MILLS, W. 
Vase: 2 


C., Jamestown Exposition, 

fossils (47968). 

MILLS, W. J.; Atlanta, Ga.: 
Moth, Chlacnogramma jasminearum 
(48446). 

MINNESOTA, UNIVERSITY OF, 
lis, Minn.: 10. plants, 
from Minnesota (47860: 


Minnea po- 
Laciniaria, 
exchange). 


Missourt BOTANICAL GARDEN, St. 
Louis, Mo.; Specimen of living 
plant, Neotreleasia ATTAD) ; 636 


plants collected by Lindheimer in 
the southwestern part of the United 


States (48008); 4. living plants, 
Thompsonella, from Mexico (48247). 
Exchange. 


MitrcHetL, Miss EvELYN GROESBEECK, 
Washington, D. C.: Types of 4 new 
species of Chironomidae (47980) ; 
family Bible printed in Dutch, 1741 


(12481: loan). 


MircHett, Hon. Joun D., Victoria, 
Tex.: Snake and frog from Texas 
(48254); 2 plants, Quercus, from 


Texas (48545). 
MITCHELL, Hon. 
sul, Chung-king, 
and skull of a 
Takin, Budorcas 
Mock, M. G., Muncie, 
rowpoint (47778). 


Mason, American con- 
West China: Skin 
male specimen of 
taxricolor (48896). 
TInd.: Flint ar- 


Montranpon, A. L., Bucarest, Rouma- 
nia: Snakes from Europe (48599). 
Moore, CLARENCE B., Philadelphia, 


Pa.: Skulls from burial mounds on 


the Arkansas River, Ark. (48603). 
Moore, J. E., Fairbury, Ill.; Archeo- 
logical stone implements (48506: 
exchange). 
Morcan, Dr. E. L., Washington, D. C.: 
2 pulbs, Camas, from Washington 
State; one edible, and a popular 


article of food among the Indians; 
the other, poisonous (48874). 


92 


Morcan, Mrs. G. W., Zanesville, Ohio: 
Commissions of Gen. G. W. Morgan, 
and a flint-lock pistol carried by him 


in the battle of Churubusco, Mexico 
(47948). 
Moruartr, Curt, Ensfeld Post DolIn- 


stein, Middle I 
Fossils from the Jura region 
exchange). 

Morton, Dr. WILLIAM JAMES, New 
York City: Portrait in oil of Dr. 
William T. G. Morton, a pioneer in 
the use of ether as an anaesthetic 
(48266). 

Mowpsray, L. L., 


Germany : 
(48525: 


vanconia, 


Bermuda Museum, 
Hamilton, Bermuda: Bones of the 
“Cahow ” bird from a_ limestone 
eave at Bailey’s Bay, Bermuda 
(47554). 


Munusr, Mrs. Erra I*., Bloomington, 
Ind.: Toad (48693). 
Munpr, Watrer, Mahlsdorf bei Ber- 


lin, Germany: Seeds of Nehinocactus 
(48556). 

Chester, Pa.: Piece of 
-anay Island. 


sasclbergti 

MuUNGER, H. W., 
Jusi cloth from Iloilo, 
Philippines (47047). 

Munn & Co., New York City: Bronze 
copy of the medal awarded by the 
Scientific American for the best de- 
vice for the protection of life and 
Jimb (48050). 


Murpocin, JouNn, jr., Deadwood, 8. 


Dak.: Specimen of Dakota red 
squirrel, Sciurus hudsonicus dako- 
tensis (48496). 

Murray, Sir Jonun, Edinburgh, Scot- 


land: Fossil corals from Christmas 
Island, Indian Ocean (48351 
Murtrenpt, Miss Mary, WNirkwood, 


Mo.: 22 specimens of Microlepidop- 


tera (48679). 

Muster D’HistorrE NATURELLE. (See 
under Elbeuf, France.) 

Mutusro NACIONAL. (See under San 
José, Costa Rica.) 

Museum or Naruran History. (See 
under Paris, France.) 

NATIONAL SOCIETY, CHILDREN OF THE 


(through 
Patchwork 


REVOLUTION 
Kendall) : 
loan). 


AMERICAN 
Mrs. A. A. 
quilt (48825; 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


NATIONAL SOCIETY OF THE COLONIAL 
DAMES OF AMERICA, Washington, 
D. C.: Colonial relics lent to the 


Society by Mrs. ae Cropper and 
Mrs. R. R. Hoes (483842); silver, 
open-face watch, fet by Ma. Louis 
Randolph Mayo; pendant earrings 
and tray (silver plated on copper), 
lent by Mrs. George W. Mayo; silver 
lent by Arthur Randolph 
and coat, vest, knee breeches, 


spoons, 
Mayo; 


and sash, lent by Mr. George Dag- 
worthy Mayo (48651); oval shoe 
buckles with brilliants, lent to the 


society by Gen. William Ruffin Cox: 
oblong shoe buckles with brilliants, 
fans, and a punch ladle, lent to the 
society by Mrs. William Ituffin Cox 
(48682) ; minature portrait of Cath- 
erine Thomson of New York, wife of 
Col. Isaac Coles, of Virginia, an 
officer in the Revolutionary Army 
and a Member of fan 
presented to Miss Elizabeth Catesby 
on the occasion of her wedding, lent 
by the Virginia Society ; prayer book 
printed in Idinburgh in 1770; steel 


Congress; 


engraving of a part of the interior 
of St. Paul’s Cathedral, lent by 
Mrs. James L. Harper; silver 


pitcher and platter of the time of 
King George III, lent by the District 
of Columbia Society (48860; 48861; 
4ASSG2) : colonial relics received from 
Mrs. William B. Beekman, New 
York City (48673) ; silver bowl won 
by the race horse Trial on the New- 
market race course, South Carolina, 
in 1776S (48185); stoneware jug 
with silver handle and top, brought 
to America on the Mayflower; 2 
silver candlesticks, probably of the 
time of Charles II; 2 glass decan- 
ters with tops; G colonial Kast India 
soup plates; 6 colonial Hast India 
dinner plates (48295). Loan. 


NATIONAL SOCIETY OF THE DAUGHTERS 
OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION, Mrs. 
Donald McLean, president-general : 
Jewel trunk, a relic of Revolutionary 
days (48789: loan). 

Navas, Rey. Lonarnos, Colegio del Sal- 


vador, Zaragoza, Spain: 2 specimens 
of Neuroptera (48244). 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


NEBRASKA, UNIVERSITY oF, Lincoln, 
Nebr. : Specimen of plant, /ibes, col- 
lected in Nebraska by P, A. Rydberg, 
being a portion of the type of Ribes 
aureum chrysococcune (48671). 

Neus, L. P., Turkey, Ariz.: 3 
mens of the lizard, Sauromalus ater, 
from Arizona (4SS76). 

Netson, Hon. Knute, United States 
Senate: Specimen of rock salt ob- 


speci- 


tained about 80 miles from = Salt 
Lake (48710). 
Wertnrs, T. D., jr., Buffalo, Tex.: 


Specimen of Phengodes (48554). 


NEWCASTLE ON TYNE, ENGLAND, HAD- | 


cock Musrtum: Collection of fossil 
vertebrates, invertebrates, and plants 
from the coal measures and the Per- 


mian of England (48568: exchange), 


New York BoranicAL GARDEN, New 
York City: 8 specimens of living 


cacti from the West Indies (47553) ; 

Cereus lepidotus material from 

Hope Gardens, Jamaica, and 2 sheets 

of Crassulaceae (47589) ; 3858 plants 

from the Bahamas (47601) ; 2 speci- 
mens of living plants from Palermo, 

Italy (47622) ; 12 ferns mainly from 

tropical America ; also 6 photographs 

of ferns of tropical American species. 

Antrophyum (47700) ; 2 

eactus Cephalocereus, from Guade- 

loupe (47719) ; 149 plants from the 

Bahamas (47784); 20 living plants, 

Cactaceae, from various localities 

(47788) ; ST plants collected in Ja- 

maica (47882); 415 plants from 

Utah (47891); specimen and S pho- 

tographs of Mexican plants collected 

by Lieberman (47911); 

of Centrophyum  dussianum from 

Guadeloupe (48085); 1,064 plants 

from the Philippine Islands and 61 

plants from the Barbados (48403) ; 

ferns from British 
(4ST07) > specimen of 
sypium, from Jamaica 
change). 

New York City, CoLueck oF Purysi- 
CIANS AND SURGEONS, CoLUMBIA UNI- 
VERSITY: Collection of osteological 
material (48228: exchange). 


specimens of 


specimen 


Guiana 


» 
cotton, Gos- 


(48714: ex- 


93 
New York STATE COLLEGE OF AGRI- 
CULTURE, Ithaca, N. Y.: 4 specimens 
of Hymenoptera (Hrorysoma 
from New York State (488351). 
NICHOLLS, J. Howarp, Galway, N. Y.: 
Rock and (48012: 
change). 
NIGHTINGALE, 


vitis, 


crystals eXx- 
Ropert C., Beech- 
amwell Rectory, Swaffham, Eng- 
land: Coltection of firesamaking ap- 
paratus (47646). 


Rey. 


Noyes, Miss Mary, Washington, D. C.: 
Collection of old embroideries and 
laces made by and formerly belong- 


ing to members of the Plimpton 
family of Southbridge and = Stur- 
bridge, Mass. (48070). 


ODELL, MILTON L., Washington, D. C.: 
2 turtles from Florida (483823). 

OrrutTT, Winsor, Bethesda, Md.: Runt 
ege of house wren, Troglodytes acdon 
(48582). 


Ono Strate UNtversitry, Columbus, 
Ohio: 16 ferns from Guatemala 
(48025): 280 plants collected in 
Guatemala by Prof. W. A. Weller- 


man (48508: exchange). 


Oldtown, 
ca- 


GLDTOWN CANOE COMPANY, 
Me.: Miniature 


noe (47826). 


canvas-covered 


Orcutt, CHARLES R., San Diego, Cal.: 
Fragments of pottery from Mexico 
(48293). 


OspurRN, Raymonpd E., Barnard Col- 
lege, Columbia University, New York 
City: 8 specimens of isopod, Penti- 
dotea whitei, Vancouver 
(48507). 


from 


OsteNnpborr, B., Vincennes, Ind.: 2 two- 
valye specimens of Unio heros from 


Indiana (48232). 


OSWELL, Mrs. C. A., Washington, D. C.: 
of old French, Dresden, 
Crown Derby, Chelsea, Na- 
poleon, and other chinaware (48844: 


Collection 
Sevres, 


loam). 


OTrTaWwa, CANADA, CENTRAL EXPERI- 
MENTAL FARM, DEPARTMENT OF AGRI- 
CULTURE: 2 specimens of Recurvaria 
gibsonella (48143). 


94 


OTTAWA, CANADA, GEOLOGICAL SURVEY 
or: TO plastotypes of Onondago and 
Hamilton fossil invertebrates 
(48090). 

Over, W. H., Clear Lake, S. Dak.: 6 
species of Naiads from Wabash 
River, Illinois (48506). 

PAINTER, A. W., Lansdowne, 
plants, Micaria ficaria, from 
sylvania (48605). 


» 


Pa. 27.5 
Penn- 


PALLISTER, Hucu D., Terlingua, Tex.: 
2 fossil shells from the Upper Cre- 
taceous related to Ostrea subspatu- 
lata (47886) ; 11 specimens of Upper 
Cretaceous fossils (48150). 

PALMER, Epwarp, Washington, D. C.: 
195 of living 
from (47559: purchase) ; 
several hundred specimens of land 
and freshwater from the 
State of Tamaulipas, Mexico 
(47596) : 574 plants from Tamauli- 
pas (47771: purchase). 


specimens Cactaceare 


Mexico 


shells 


PALMER, WILLIAM, U. S. National Mu- 
seum: Skull of sloth bear, J/elir- 
sus (48357): 1,915 insects collected 


by Messrs. Mackie, Wood, Lyon, and 
(48511). 

FRANCE, MUSEUM NATURAL 
History: 12 specimens representing 


Palmer 
PARIS, OF 
G species of isopods from the east- 
ern part of Africa, collected by M. 
de Rothschild (48442) ; 29 specimens 
representing 7 of 


species isopods 


from the Chareot Expedition to the | 
Antarctic (48494). Exchange. 
ParisH, S. B., San Bernardino, Cal. : 


9 


2 living cacti, Opuntia, from Cali- 
fornia (48135) ; 
hii (48888). 

PARKER, B. F., Bridgeton, N. J.: 
men of walking-stick, Diapheromera 

(47893 
A. A. Guadalajara, Mexico: 

2 grasshoppers, Taeniopoda (47742). 


ARTEL; Mil, J: M, EF. .U, 


plant, Ribes paris- 


Speci- 


velici 


PARSONS, 


S. Army, 


Malabang, Mindanao, Philippine Is- | 


(48455; 48622) ; 
specimen of beetle from the Philip- 
pine Islands (48498), 


lands: 8 scorpions 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


Pascor, Doctor, Manila, Philippine Is- 
lands (received through Dr. Edgar 
A. Mearns, U. 8S. Army): Skin of a 
snake, Python reticulatus, from Lu- 
zon, Philippine Islands (48636). 


Patcu, Miss Epira M., Orono, Me.: 
Moth, Heterocampa guitivitta 
(48140); 4 pupae and a larva of Cro- 
cigrapha normani (48750) ; 2 moths, 
cocoons and work of a tortricid 
(48813 

PATCHELL, JAMES, Knik, Cook Inlet, 


Alaska: Oligochaetous worm (48566 ). 

PATTEN, Miss JuLieT, Washington, 
D. C.: 8 living plants, Sedan, from 
England (47587). 


PAuLL, Mrs. S. O., Wellsburg, W. Va.: 


Mole cricket, Gryllotalpa borealis 
(47804). 
Payn, Euias J., Olympia, Wash.: 


Young oysters (48858). 
Payne, Miss Betrrit L., 

Md.: About 40 Devonian 

from Maryland (48592). 


srunswick, 
fossils 


PENLAN SLATE CoMPANY, Penlan, Va.: 
Slate from a quarry near Penlan 
(48637), 

Perkins, G. H., Burlington, Vt.: Neg- 

and photographs of type of 

whale, Delphinapterus  ver- 
montanus, from Charlotte Town- 
ship, Vt. (47564: purchase). 


atives 


fossil 


oY 


Pinspry, H. A., Philadelphia, Pa.: 2 
specimens of a barnacle, Octolasmis 
forresti, on the of Palinuwrius 
argus, from Summerland Key, Fla. 


(48216). 


gills 


Mrs. 
Large 


J. Ws, 


collection 


Washington, 
of fans, 
paintings, ete. 

awl-case 
Sioux In- 


PINCHOT, 
|B ora We 
laces, embroideries, 
(48717: Joan); beaded 
made by the northern 
dians (4878+). 


Piper, C. V., Department of Agricul- 
ture, Washington, D. C.: 6S plants 
collected in Oregon by Kirk Whited 
and W. C. Cusick (47912; 48402) ; 
2 ferns collected in the State of 
Washington by J. B. Flett (48466). 


REPORT OF NATIONAL 


Pirtier, H., Department 

ture, Washington, D. C.: 67 mosses 
and 338 plants from Central Amer- 
ica (47639; 47718) ; 126 plants from 
Colombia, South America (47752 
20 plants collected in Salvador by 
Carlos Renson (478238); 2 crabs, 
Pseudothelphusa_  cobanensis 
(48097). 


PoLkK, GEorGE W., San Antonio, Tex. 
Silk badge of the Young Men’s Na- 
tional Whig Convention, held in Bal- 
timore, May 4, 1840 (48001). 


PottockK, Miss A. L., Seattle, Wash.: 
Nest of Puget Sound brush tit, 
Psaltriparus MINUS stauratus 
(47874). 


Ariz.: Sil- 
Fair mines at 


Powers, FRANK, Harshaw, 
ver ore from World's 
Harshaw (48322). 

W. A,, 


» 


T'OYSER, Philadelphia, Pa.: 3 


ferns collected in Pennsylvania 
(48538: exchange). 

Preston, A. E., Los Angeles, Cal. 
Fossil sea biscuit, Asfrodapsis sp. 
(48315). 

l’rReESTON, H. B., London, England: 21 


type specimens, representing 
cies, of land and fresh-water shells 
from Mexico, Central and South 
America (48704: purchase). 

PRINGLE, C. G., Burlington, Vt.: 264 
plants collected in Mexico (47569 
purchase) ; living plants from Nuevo 
Leon, Mexico (47625: exchange); 2 
living plants from Guerrero, Mex- 
ico (47681: exchange); 10° living 
plants collected in Mexico (47809) ; 
dl Mexican plants (48237). 


20 spe- 


PuBLIC MUSEUM. 
Cast of a large 
nois (48675: 


WIS. : 
ax from Illi- 
exchange). 


MILWAUKER, 
stone 


PuRPUS, C. A., Zacuapam, 
Living plants, 


Puebla, Mex- 


ico: Oliveranthus and 


| 


Heheveria, and seeds from Mexico 
(47578; 47785; 47754); TO living | 
plants from Mexico (47939; 47971: 


purchase) ; specimen of Sedum from 
Orizaba, Mexico (48021); living 
specimen of Sedastrun from Vera 
Cruz (48182); seeds of Dahlia from 
Mexico (48278); 9 living cacti, 
Cereus, from Vera Cruz (48423). 


$2065 


1908. 95 


MUSEUM, 


of Agricul- | QUAINTANCE, A. L., Department of Ag- 


riculture, Washington, D. C.: Type 
material of Aleuwrodes howardi n. sp. 
from Cuba (47704). 


QUARTERMAN, OscaR F., Canaveral, 
Ila.: Egg capsule of nurse shark, 


Ginglymostoma cirratum (ATSI4). 

QUEEN’S UNIVERSITY. (See 
IKingston, Ontario, Canada. ) 

RateH, Mrs. W. L., Washington, 
C.: 1,061 birds’ eggs and 117 
forming part of the collection of the 
late Dr. W. L. Ralph (48683 

RANSIER, H. E., Manlius, 
Plants, Botrychium 
from the central part of New York 
(48010). 


under 


1o% 


nests, 


NaS Yer 
OnOndAIJCHSE, 


RIcHARD, U. S. National 
Museum: Pair of Tower pistols with 
bell mouths and barrels 
(123868: loan). 


RATHBUN, 


brass 


REED, 
photographs 
Cetorhinus 


REED, Mrs. ELIZABETH A., Chicago, III.: 
Shells and other invertebrate animals 
from the keys off Sarasota, Florida 
(48089). 


EDWIN C., Concepcion, Chile: 2 
of a basking-shark, 
nuerimus (ATS9O). 


REED, FRep. M., Riverside, Cal.: 2 
specimens of living cactus, Opuntia, 


from California (48755). 


Rew, Mrs. WHITELAW, London, Eng- 
land (received through Mrs. James 
Pinchot): Collar and pair of cuffs 
of Venetian point, latter part of 
XVIII century (48806). 

Reuter, O. M., Abo, Finland: 
mens of Hemiptera (48338 
change). 


20 ee 
eXx- 


REYNOLDS, ALLEN JESSE, Council Grove, 
I’'ragmentary 


and 


Ixans. : impressions of 
fossil leaves 


(47915). 


associated rock 


RHoaps, I. Mitton, Edge 
Ilmenite from Edge Hill 
limonite geodes (48215 


Bl Pa 
(4756500. 
Exchange. 


RICHARDSON, Mrs. CHARLES W., Wash- 


ington, D. C.: Collection of English 
and German porcelains and silver 


(48847: loan). 


96 


IticuARDSON, Mrs. Tromas F., Wash- 
ington, D. C.: of Aart 
jects, consisting of laces, embroider- 

and 


Collection ob- 


ivories, other 


(4SS05 : 


ies, 
loan). 

Po dh, Dai) Gs 
6,950 mounted and 2,000 unmounted 
specimens of fungi (48196: deposit) + 
1,000 specimens of fungi (48197). 

Ricksecker, L. I, San Cal:: 
About 100 moths (48688). 

S. National Mu- 

seum: 5 birds’ skins and a partial 

skeleton of a bird (48147). 


RICKER, Washington, 


Diego, 


Itipaway, Roper, U. 


Ritey, J. H., U. S. National Museum : 
25 birds’ skins from EKurope, Mo- 
rocco, and the Canary Islands 


(48239). 
Itio0 DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL, INSTITUTO DE 
MANGUINHOS: 26 species of mosqui- 


toes from Brazil (48659: exchange ). 


Rivera, Manurn J...) Department of 
Agriculture, Washington, D. C.: 


About from Southern 


Chile 


125 beetles 
(AT7T0G6). 
RoBBINS, CHARLES P., Spokane, Wash. : 

Snmples of tin ore from Spokane tin 

mines (47797). 

Rospertson, Mrs. I. C., Columbia, 8S. C.: 
of the 
Catawba Indinnus, and 25 unmounted 


Collection pottery made by 
photographs illustrating their native 
customs, ete, 


Mrs. 


(48736: purchase). 


RoBESON, G. M., Washington, 


Id, Co: Fan and piece of Greek lace 
(48805: loan). 
ROBINSON, Maj. Wurt, U. 8S. Army, 


West Point, N. Y.: Mammals, birds, 
and inseets from various localities 


(48359): about 5O insects (4SG18). 

Florissant, Colo. : 
(476351: ex- 
(4810S). 


RoHWER, S.  A.,, 
Moths 


change ) ; 


and mosquitoes 


175 insects 


IDs AN 


1G specimens 


about 


A, 
Boulder, 


RoHWER, SS. ana VT COCKE- 


RELL, Colo: 
of mosquitoes, representing the spe- 
absobri- 


(=vitta- 


cies Culiseta impations — ( 
and ides 


pus—chCtehii) (47555). 


HWUS) stimulans 


| 
| 
| 


articles | 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


Rouue, H., 
comprising 


serlin, Germany: 166 lots, 
hundred = land 
the Philippine Islands, 
Mexico, Africa, ete. (from 
the Mollendorff collection and other 
sources) (47729: purchase). 
Roosevetr, Ton, TreODORE, 
of the United States : 
embroidered Arabian — saddle-cloth 
(47815): model, in brass, of 
Mgyptian obelisk (48118). 


several 
shells from 
China, 


President 
A beautifully 


a 


Roosevetr, Mrs. Puropore, The White 
Painted fan with carved 
ivory sticks, and a handkerchief of 
Philippine drawnwork and embroid- 


Tlouse : 


ery (48782: loan). 

ROOSEVELT, QUENTIN, The White 
House: Bird, Certhia  familiaris 
americana (AT9OF). 


Rosensrock, E., Gotha, Germany: 9) 


ferns from southern Brazil (48113: 
purchase). 
RossiagNo., G. R.. Jv., Savannah, Ga.: 
Nests and eggs of seaside sparrow, 
Anmoodramus nearitimius, and Worn 
wren, Telmatodytes 


parent birds of the 


ingiom’s Imarsh 
griseus, with 2 
latter (4753S). 

Rowuey, J., Palo Alto, Cal.: 
Norer vagrans (ASGS4). 


Shrew, 


RovaAL BoraNic GARDEN. 


Caleutta, India.) 


(See under 


Royat Boranic GARDENS. (See under 
Kew. London, England.) 
MusEeuM. (See un- 


der Berlin, Germiuny. ) 


ROYAL BOTANICAL 


Or Hisrory. 
(See under Vienna, Austria. ) 
Suffolk, Wa.: 2 
purple finches, Carpodacus purpurcus 
(48448). 


RoyvaL MuseEUM NATURAL 


ROYSTER, ALPHLONSO, 


Ruca, Haroip G., Hanover, N. H.: 11 
ferns from New England (48456: 


exchange). 
RUSSELL, 
tired), 
tion of 
(48192). 


Gol, A. Hi, Gas. Arniy Are 
Washington, D. C.: Collec- 
small arms and appliances 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


Ryper, Dr. Hmity B., Chicago, Il: 
Parsi schoolgirl’s suit, or “God 


jacket ” (48786: purchase). 
Sarrorp, W. E., Department of Agri- 


culture, Washington, D. C.: Robe 
made from skins of an American 


ostrich, Rhea americana, collected in 
Patagonia (47869) ; cutlasses, lance- 
heads, ete., from the island of Guam 
(48518). 

Sr. Joun, Epwarp P., Hartford, Conn. : 
Fragments of human bones from the 
eastern bank of the Connecticut 
River at South Windsor (48495). 

Sr. NICHOLAS Society, New York City: 
Bronze portrait medallion of Wash- 
ington Irving (48249). 


Sanvers, B. L., Selmer, Tenn.: Pupa 
of a beetle, Dynastes tityus (47848). 
Na- 

Rica 


MUSEO 
Costa 


Rica, 
from 


San José, CosTa 
CIONAL: Fishes 
(48787). 


SANTIAGO DE LAS VEGAS, CUBA, ESTA- 
CION CENTRAL AGRONOMICA: 3. speci- 


mens of Mimosa from Cuba (47661: 
exchange) ; 200 Cuban plants 


(47768); T specimens of 
American plants (477387 : exchange) ; 


62 Cuban ferns (47810). 


tropical 


SAo PAULO, BraAzin, INSTITUTO SERUM- 
THERAPICO DO ESTADO DE SAO PAULO: 
18 snakes from South America 
(486383: exchange). 


SAUTER, H., Takao, South Formosa: 
Fishes, reptiles, and invertebrates 
from Formosa (48795: purchase). 


SCHAFFER, CHARLES, Glen Echo, Md.: 
Skin of an otter, Lutra 
(48921); skin of Lutra canadensis 
(47991: purchase). 


canadensis 


ScCHAUS, WILLIAM, Costa Rica, Central 
America: A very interesting lot of 
mounted and unmounted Lepidop- 
tera, comprising about 5,000) speci- 
mens from Costa Rica and Panama, 
collected by the donor (48286) ; 


about 2.500 specimens of Lepidop- 
tera (48552); about TOO specimens 


of Lepidoptera (48690). (See also 


under C. H. Lankester.) 


9% 


ScHutey, Mrs. F. W., Washington. 
D. C.: English silver teapot (48848: 
loan). 

SCHMID, Epwarp %8S., Washington, 
D. C.: Solitaire, Wyadestes unicolor 
(4SG07 ). 

ScHRopDER, Corpl. Roperr A., Fort Ma- 
son, Cal.: Birds and mammals from 
Basilan (48080). 

ScipmMorgE, Miss Kniza R., Washington, 
ID. C.: Chinese and Japanese porce- 
lains (48727: loan); model of Bor- 
gund church, Norway (48809). 

ScorT, JOHN W., An old- 
style melopean presented through 
Mrs. G. W. Woodborne, Uhrichsville, 
Ohio (47966). 


HEIRS OF: 


Sears, JOHN H., Peabody Museum, Sa- 

lem, Mass.: Fossil bryozoan, Shizo- 
porella unicornis, from 
Beverly, Mass. (48045) ; 
from Bass River, Beverly, and Dan- 
vers River (483839). 


3ass River, 


bryozoans 


SEELINGER, STEVE, Norfolk, Va.: Speci- 
men of ocean sunfish, J/ola mola, 
taken from near Virginia Beach, 


and a parasitic copepod, Pennella sp. 
(48666 ) . 

SeTON-IX ARR, H. W., Wimbledon, Lon- 
don, England: Drawings and photo- 
graphs of flint implements collected 
in the Fayum, Egypt (47645); col- 
lection of prehistoric stone objects 
from Egypt and India (47957). 

SEWARD, Miss Onive Ristey, Washing- 
ton, D. C.: 18 pieces of Nymphen- 
berg ware (48845: loan). 

SuHantz, H. L., Columbia, Mo.: 4 
specimens of living cacti, Opuntia, 
from Missouri (48152: exchange). 


SHEARER, C. B., Llano, Tex.: Speci- 
men of wollastonite (48086). 
SHEETS, G. A., Weston, Mich.; Great 


horned owl, Bubo virginianus, from 
Michigan (47901). 


SHERMAN, F., Raleigh, N. C.: Sala- 
mander from Fairfax County, Va. 
(487387). 

SHERMAN, JOHN D., jr... Brooklyn 


N. Y.: Beetle, Scutopterus angustus 
(47813). 


98 


SHREVE, ForREST, Baltimore, Md.: 105 
plants from Maryland (478381; 

47955). 

Dr. GEORGE 

Specimen 


Santa 
living 


SHULL, Ele Rosa, 
Cal. : of cactus, 
Opuntia, from Vexas; also specimen 
of Opuntia from California (48453) 

A. M,, 

the do- 


SICARD, JACQUES, Golfe-Juan, 


Krance: Plaque illustrating 


nov's * metallic luster ware” 
(AT662). 

Sim, T. R., Pietermaritzburg, Natal, 
South Africa: 8 fragmentary speci- 
mens of ferns, cAsplenium, from 
South Africa (48268). 


Simpson, W. W., Taochow, Old City, 
China: 
chinensis, parasitic 
larva of a beetle (48778). 


SINCLAIR, Dr. W. J., Princeton, N. J.: 


Specimen of Cordy- 
upon the 


IKansu, 


CCDS 


Teeth of Phytosaurus from TFossil 
Forest, near Adamana, Arizona 
(48564). 
Sirz, Miss Ciara B., Washington, 
D. C.: 2 photographs of the Key 


Mansion, Washington, D. C. (47663). 

SLATER, W. M., Washington, D. C.: 2 
specimens of rutile ore from Rose- 
land, Va. (484385). 

IeMILE Cedarville, Cal.: 
Promissory note issued by the first 
Republic of France (48850). 

SMILLIE, THOMAS W.. 
D. C.: Scolytid beetle, 
fasciatum, = with 
(48524). 


SMALLS, 


> 
Fea 


Monarthron 
parasitic moth 
SMITH, ADAH L., National City, Cal.: 
Shells, Hulethidium substriatum 
and Phasianella perforata (4AT863). 


SmirH, Benjamin H., Philadelphia. 
Pa.: Plant, Pimpinella saxrifraga, 
from Pennsylvania (48074). 

Smitu, HH. TL... Department of Agricul- 
ture, Washington, D. C.: Collection 
of about 3,500 insects: about 
25 spiders from Alabama (48768). 

B., New 

moths (cotypes) 

of 
larva, 


also 


SMITH, JOHN 
We 322.5 
exchange): 5 


Brunswick, 
(47633 : 
Culesr 
pupa, 


larvae 


turbans (47900) ; and 


Washington, | 


per- | 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


SMITH, JOHN B.—Continued. 


pupal skin of Culex perturbans 
(48850). 
SMirtH, JOHN DONNELL, Baltimore, 


Md.: 2 Guatemalan palms, Winetos- 
tigma (48124); 145° specimens of 
ferns, Dryopteris, Polypodium, ete., 
mainly from Central America 
(48457): 2 specimens of Lechthi- 
daceae (484838). Loan. 

SmirH, R. I., West Raleigh, N. C.: 6 
specimens of Hymenoptera, Sigal- 
phus curculionis (48820). 


SMITH, STEPHEN Decatur, bequest of 
(received through S. Decatur Smith, 
jr.) : Gold ring given by Capt. Rich- 
ard Somers to Commodore Stephen 
Decatur, and after the death of the 


latter presented by his widow to 
Francis Gurney Smith. From him 
it descended to Stephen Decatur 


Smith. by whom it was bequeathed 
to the National Museum (48630). 


THOMAS C., Washington, 
specimens 


Sm1tTH, Dr. 
D. C.i 2 anatomical 
(48712; 48187). 

SmitH, W.D., Washington, D.C.: Nose 
whistle (48254). 

SMITHSONIAN 

Collection 


INSTITUTION : 

of historical objects 
bequeathed to the Institution by 
Mr. Henry R. Magruder (received 
through Mr. Arthur C. Gibson) 
(47577) ; bronze medal presented to 
the Institution by Mrs. Maria H. 
Stinchfield, of Detroit, Mich. (47671) ; 
a pair of bronze flower-vases pre- 
sented to Mr. Charles Lanman in 
1883 by the Emperor of Japan, and 
now presented to the Smithsonian 
Institution by Mrs. Adeline Lanman 
(47905); vertebrate and inverte- 
brate fossils collected in Alaska by 
Cc. W. Gilmore (48004): 35 plants, 
Cyperaceae, Orchidaceae, and Poa- 
ceae, collected in Guatemala by Mr. 
yon Turckheim and presented by 
Capt. John Donnell Smith, Balti- 
more, Md. (48042) ; 85 plants. mainly 
Orchidaceae, Cyperaceae, and Poa- 
ceae, presented by Capt. John Don- 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 99 


SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION—Cont'd. 
nell Smith (48068) ; 22 plants from 
the Sello collection of the Botanical 
Museum, Berlin, Germany, presented 
by Capt. Jobn Donnell Smith 
(48153) ; the Gustav Hambach col- 
lection representing the main divi- 
sions of the North American Paleo- 
zoic, including numerous echino- 
derms and a fine representation of 
Mississippi Valley Subcarboniferous 
fossils, also the types of a large 
number of Pentremites. fossil leaves, 
fishes, and some of the figured speci- 
mens of the old Shumard collection 
(48175); 8 skeletons of Eskimos, 
collected by CC. W. Gilmore in 
Alaska (48191); collection of In- 
diana Niagaran fossils, purchased 
from J. KR. Gilbert, Ubee, Ind. 
(48201) ; pottery jar found by an 
Indian on the San Carlos Reserva- 
tion, Ariz., and obtained through the 
courtesy of the Commissioner of In- 
dian Affairs (48211); the 55-horse- 
power, 5-cylinder gasoline engine, 
used on Dr. Samuel P. Langley’s 
aerodrome, 1903 (48265); a silver 
figurine from Bolivia, in the style 
of the Titicaca region, doubtless of 
native origin and belonging to the 
pre-Columbian period, presented by 
Dr. Thomas S. K. Morton, Phila- 
delIphia, Pa. (48276); life-preserver 
worn by Maj. J. W. Powell during 
his famous exploration on the Green 
and Colorado rivers in 1869, and pre- 
sented by Mr. William R. Hawkins, 
Eden, Ariz., through Mir. Robert B. 
Stanton, New York City (48296) ; 
ethnological material from the Phil- 
ippine Islands, ete., presented by 
Maj. George P. Ahern, U. S. Army 
(retired) (48568); a collection of 
corals, shells, and other inverte- 
brates from Flint Island. obtained 
by Mr. C. G. Abbot, of the Astro- 
physical Observatory, in connection 
with the solar eclipse expedition 
(48573) ; 27 plants, mainly Guate- 
malan orchids, presented by Capt. 
John Donnell Smith (48470); 48 
speciemrs of Guatemalan orchids, 
presented by Capt. John Donnell 


SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION—Cont d. 
Smith (48557); 189 plants collected 
chiefly by Lehmann in Colombia and 
Central America, presented by Capt. 
John Donnell Smith (48569) ; about 
5,000 specimens of Cambrian fossils 
from British Columbia, and about 
2.500 from Montpelier, Idaho, col- 
lected by Dr. Charles DD. Walcott 
and party during the summer of 
190T (48712); 12 pieces of pottery 
purchased through the Office of In- 
dian <Affairs by Horton M. Miller, 
superintendent Moqui Agency, Keams 
Cation, Ariz. (48724). 

Bureau of American Ethnology: 
Collection of ethnological specimens 
and plants made by Mrs. M. C. Ste- 
venson in the pueblos of Zuni and 
Taos, N. Mex. (47686); aboriginal 
soapstone objects from a quarry on 
Connecticut avenue extended (Rose 
Hill), collected by W. H.. Gill 
(47687); large steatite pipe illus- 
trating the use of the ordinary 
pump-drill, made by G. Wiley Gill; 
arrow-points collected in a village 
site in Sussex County, Del., by G. 
Wiley Gill (4768S); small bronze 
(hawk) bell frem a mound in Ala- 
bama, obtained by Peter A. Brannon, 
of Montgomery, Ala. (47689); iron 
or steel hammer picked up on the 
beach at Coan River, lower Poto- 
mac, by De Laney Gill (47690) ; 
Hopi notched * fiddle” and 2 perfo- 
rated bits of metal, presented by 
Mrs. H. T. Hall, Chicago, Il. 
(47691); stone ax and flaked im- 
plements from Popes Creek, Md., 
collected by W. H. Holmes (47692) ; 
cast of a stone ax belonging to D. 
I. Bushnell, of St. Louis, Mo. 
(47965) ; steatite pot from Mecklen- 
burg County, Va. (47964); basket- 
box made by the Chitimacha Indians 
of Louisiana, collected by J. R. Swan- 
ton (47965); 2 grooved axes and a 
hammer-stone (47996) ; collection of 
objects representing the industrial 
and social life of the Tahltan In- 
dians, Stikine River, British Colum- 
bia, collected by George TT. Emmons 
(47997) ; 2 human skulls, one from 


SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION 


100 REPORT OF NATIONAL 


Contd. 

a burial mound in La Push, Wash., 
the other from a cave in Pulaski 
County, Mo. (48189); 15 plants 
collected by Mrs. Matilda C. Steven- 
son in New Mexice (48230) ; collec- 
tion of fragmentary 
pottery made by Gerard Fowke from 
mounds in Central Missouri, under 
the auspices of the St. Louis Society 
of the Archeological Institute of 
(48441); surface pebbles 
mouth of the Colorado 
River, Mexico, collected by D. IL. 
Gill in 1900 (48519): collection of 
archeological objects resulting fron: 


bones and 


America 
from the 


explorations made in Florida in 1896 
by the late F. H. Cushing, under the 
joint auspices of the Bureau ot 
American Ethnology and the Arch- 
eological Association of the Univer: 
sity of Pennsylvania (485381);  col- 
lection of Indian relics recently re- 
ceived from C. W. Weigel, of IKenne 
wick, Wash. (48682). 

National Zoological Park: Laugh- 
Larus atricilla; 
Plegadis 


ing gull, white- 
faced ibis, Quaraunda 
(47547); canvasback duck, Aythya 
vallisneria, Franklin’s gull, Larus 
franklini (47548); 8 specimens of 
spoonbill, Ajaja ajaja, willet, Sym- 
(47549); Cuban 


Odocoileus, 2 


phemia inornata 


deer, specimens of 


mule deer, Odocoileus macrotis 
(47550); mule deer, Cariacus ma- 
crotis, kinkajou, Cercoleptes caudi- 
volvulus, mink, Putorius vison, black 
ape, Cynopithecus niger, common 
macaque, J/acacus cynomolgus, bur- 
rhel sheep, Ovis nahoor, proug-horn, 
Antilocapra americana, 2 specimens 


of coypu, Jiyocastor coypus, 8 speci- 


mens of Florida  wild-cat, Layne 
rufus  floridanus, 2 specimens of 
Ilorida otter, Lutra canadensis 
caga, flying phalanger, Petaurus, 


lion, Melis leo (47794) ; 8 specimens 


of barn owl, Stric pratineola, sand- 


hill crane, Grus canadensis, 2 speci- 
mens of roseate spoonbill, Ajaja 
ajaja, spotted bower bird, Chlamay- 
derma maculata, erested pigeon, Ocy- 
Striv 


phaps  lophotes, barn owl, 


MUSEUM, 1908. 


SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION—Cont’d. 


pratincola, wood ibis, Tantalus locu- 
lator, Dblaek-crowned night heron, 
Nycticorar nycticoran naevius, Lou- 


isiana heron, Ardea tricolor rufi- 
collis,  voseate  spoonbill, Ajaja 
ajaja  (4T795) 3; water moccasin, 
Ancistrodon — piscivorus, T  speci- 


mens of iguana, Cyclura, 2 speci- 
iguana (47796); coypu, 
Myocastor coypus, kinkajou, Cerco- 
caudivolvulus, bull snake, 
specimens of 


mens of 


leptes 
Pituophis 
iguana 


sayi, 2 
(47941) ; bronze-winged 
pigeon, Phaps  chalcoptera, quail, 
Perdix cinerea, 2 specimens of 
crested pigeon, Ocyphdps lophotes, 
crowned pigeon, Gourd victoria 
(47942); 8 specimens of iguana, 
(47945); prong- 
ameri- 


Cyclura sp., ete. 
horn antelope, -Lutilocapra 
Cariacus, black bear, 
Felis 
conocolor, California sea-lion Zalo- 
phus californianus (47944) ; harbor 
seal, Phoca vitulina, 5 specimens of 


cana, deer, 


Ursus dimericanus, cougar, 


crested pigeon, Ocyphaps lophotes, 
mute swan, Cygnus gibbus, spider 
monkey, A¢eles sp.; capuchin, Cebus 
Dasy- 
Ursus 


hypoleucus, golden agouti, 
procta aguti, black bear, 
americanus (47945); crested pigeon, 
Ocyphaps lophotes (47956) ; iguana, 
Cyclura cyclura (48002) ; pine snake, 
Pituophis (48018) ; 
American beaver, Castor canadensis 
(48053) ; hedgehog, Hrinaceus euro- 
pacus (48038); Guinea baboon, 
Papio sphine (48071); black leop- 
ard, Melis pardus, swift fox, Vulpes 
veloxw (48081); diamond rattlesnake, 
(48082) ; 
iguana, Jguana sp., California val- 
ley quail, Callipepla — californica 
(48112); American badger, Taridea 
americana (48145); iguana, /guana 
sp., (48206) ; ocellated turkey, J/elea- 
gris ocellata (48207) ; kiwi, Apteryxc 
mantelli, ved kangaroo  J/acropus 
rufus (48208); lemur, Lentur mon- 
goz (48212); gopher snake, Spilotes 
cordis couperii (48255); American 
badger, Taridea americana (48256) ; 
Cyanocitta cristata 


melanoleueus 


Crotalus adamanteus 


blue jay, 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION—Cont'd. 


(48257); a pair of dropped antlers 
of caribou, Rangifer caribou (48267) ; 
agouti, Dasyprocta — prymnolopha 
(48282); great anteater, J/yrmeco- 
phaga jubata (48283); snowy owl, 
Nyctea nyctea (48328): canvasback 
duck, Aythya vallisneria, king vul- 
ture, Gypagus papa (483829) ; north- 
ern sea-lion, Humetopias — stelleri 
(48830) : collared peccary, Dicotyles 
tajacu (48331); guanaco, Lama 
huanacos (48360); ruffed lemur, 
Lemur varius (48561): banded rat- 
tlesnake, Crotalus horridus (48562) : 
canvasback duck, Aythya vallisneria 
(48363); 2 specimens of Turopean 
hedgehog, Brinaceus 
(48420) ; mule deer, Cariacus macro- 
tis (484738) ; Vuyctea 
nyctea, laughing kingfisher, Dacelo 
gigas (48474) ; gopher snake, 
Spilotes  corais (48475) ; 
barsingha duvaueclii 
(48476); 2 
Tatusia novemcineta 
ted lynx, Lyne rufus 
Alaska peninsula brown bear, Ursus 
gyas (48610); European hedgehog, 
Brinaccus curopacus (48611) 3) pig- 
tailed monkey, Wacacus nemestrinus 
(48612); 4 specimens of coyote, Ca- 


CULOPAeUs 


snowy owl, 


couperti 
deer, Cervus 
specimens of armadillo, 
(48609) > spot- 


maculatus, 


nis lutrans (48613): Eskimo dog, 
Canis familiaris (48614): moufflon 


ocelot, 
C'o- 


spoon- 


Ovis —musinon (48615) ; 
Felis pardalis (4ST1S) ; conure, 
nurus wranthogenius, 
bill, Ajaja ajaja (4ASTI9) +: spring 
buck, Antidorcas (48720) ; 
bull snake, Pituwophis sayi (AST22); 
fisher, J/ustela (48724) ; 
earacal, Lynx Tasmanian 
devil, Sarcophilus ursinus (48721); 
zebu, Bos indicus (4AST25 monkey, 
Macacus speciosus (4AST25): Canada 
(48726) ; 


Branta 
australasi- 


roseute 
euchore 


pennantii 
caracal, 


goose, CANAICHSIS 
native Companion, 
ana, great white egret, Ardea cgretta 
(48906) ; gray kangaroo, 
giganteus (48907); red-shouldered 
hawk, Buteo  lineatus, 
Craxr globicera, trumpeter swan, 
Olor buccinator, aoudad, Ovis tra- 
gelaphus (48909); Egyptian 


Grus 


Jfacropus 


CUuLrassow, 


fla- 


SMITILSONIAN 


101 


INSTITUTION—Cont’d. 
mingo, Phanicopterus  antiquorumn 
(48947) ; king snake, Ophibolus ge- 
tulus, rattlesnake, Crotalus adaman- 
(48908); Virginia deer, Cari- 
virginianus (48910); common 
macaque, J/adcacus cynomolgus, aou- 
dad, Ovis tragelaphus, red deer, 
Cervus clephas, gray fox, Urocyon 
virginianus, ocelot, Felis pardalis, 2 
specimens of nine-banded armadillo, 
Tatusia 


teus 
(Cus 


novemeincta, 2 specimens 
of yiseacha, Lagostomus trychodac- 
fylus (48911): gray wolf, Canis oc- 
cidentalis, capuchin, Cebus hypoleu- 
cus, 2 specimens of Rhesus monkey, 
Macdcus rhesus, 4 specimens of com- 
mon macaque, J/acacus cynomolgus, 


spoonbill duck, Spatula clypeata, 
California valley quail, Callipepla 
californica, laughing gull, Larus 


atricilla, American white pelican, 
Pelecanus crythrorhynchrus (48912). 

National Museum, collected by 
mentbers of the staff: Barber, H. S.: 
About GOO insects from Dorchester 
County, Md, (47685) ; red bat, Lasi- 
(1S406) : 


(QUCHCUS 


Urs borealis specimen of 

(48716). 
Bartsch, Paul: 4 skulls of maminals 
(47846) ; 


Minnesota 


oak, minor 


and a shake from 
(47873) ; Jand and fresh- 
water chiefly Naiads, from 
the Mississippi Valley (47946) : skull 


frogs 
shells, 


of an owl, probably the great horned 
Bubo — virginianus (47999). 
Bassler, R. S.: About 5,000 
mens of fossil invertebrates from the 


owl, 


speci- 


and 
Wis 
Lem- 
Ter- 


rocks of Tennessee 
(47776). 
Skin and skull of a Lemming, 
(47994), TIrdliéka, Ales: 
rapin from Rock Creek Park, D.C. 
(47536). Lyon,-M. W., jr.: 8 mam- 
mals from near Washington, D. C. 
(48415). Maxon, W. R.: Skin and 
skull of a rat, Capromys, from Cuba 
(479935). Painter, J. H.: 100 plants 
cultivated in the Distriet of Colum- 
bia (47660). Palmer, William: Cot- 
ton-tail rabbit, Sylvilagus f. mallurus 
(48412); white leeches from the 
Peaks of Otter, Bedford County, Va, 
(48576). Ridgway, Robert: A 


Paleozoic 


Virginia Gilmore, C. 


US 


mol- 


102 


REPORT OF 

SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION—Cont'd, 
Jusk, and a small collection of rep- 
tiles and insects (47959). Riley, 
J. H.: 7 bats; skin and skull of a 
chipmunk and a mole (47658); red 
squirrels, Sciurus hudsonicus loquar, 
and the skull of a weasel, Putorius 
(48628); red squirrel, Sciurus hud- 
sonicus loquaxr (48895). Rose, J. N.: 
150 living plants, mainly Cactaceae, 
from Mexico and the southwestern 
section of the United States (48568) ; 
seeds of Fouquieria (48629) ; GS livy- 
ing plants, Cactaceae, mainly from 


Arizona (486389); 73 living Cacta- 
cene from the southwestern United 
States (48670); 20 specimens of 


living cacti from the southwestern 
United States (4870S) ; 7S specimens 
of living cacti, mainly from Arizona 
(48711); 76 living 
plants, mainly Cactaceae, from the 


specimens of 


southwestern United States (48741, 
48753); 44 living plants, mainly 
eacti, from California (48780). 


Seeger, G. A.: Green snake, Cyclo- 
phis aestivus, from Virginia (47787). 
Steele, E. 8.: 189 plants from the vi- 
cinity of Washington, D, C. (479990). 
Stejneger, Reptiles, ba- 
trachians, beetles, mollusks, and iso- 
pods from (47760). 


Leonhard: 


Massachusetts 


Washington, Charles, Tree toad 
from the District of Columbia 
(48745 piece of wood overgrown 
with barnacles, from Chesapeake 
Beach (48818); tortoise, Terrapene 


carolina, from Beach 
(48883). 

Models made in the Anthrepolog- 
ical Laboratory: Cast of 
sculpture of a head in high relief 
(47616) ; bust of a Van- 
couver Island woman, showing arti- 
ficial deformation of the head 
(47665): plaster casts of stone im- 
plements (47827); casts of celt and 
supposed charm-stone (48065); 5 
plaster busts of American Indians 
(48091) ; plaster casts of prehistoric 
implements exhibited in~ pri- 
vate the Jamestown 
EXxposition (48119); cast of a large 


Chesapeake 


stone 


plaster 


stone 


collections at 


NATIONAL 


MUSEUM, 1908. - 
SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION—Cont'd. 
grooved stone ax belonging to the his- 
torical department of Iowa (48319) ; 
2 casts of a stone gouge (485-49) ; 
vast of banner-stone with drill core 
(483897) ; casts of a steel die orig- 
inally used to stamp United States 
muskets at the Harpers Ferry Ar- 
senal, and altered for the same use 
at Fayetteville, N. C., for the Con- 
federate army (48465); cast of a 
Mexican god (48528); plaster cast 
of a medal or coin, date unknown, 
bearing a representation of the bust 
of “Christ” (48700); life-size lay 
figure groups, in’ boats, depicting 
Capt. John Smith trading for corn 
with Powhatan Indians (48781); 
lay figures illustrating the nations 
most prominent in the peopling of 
America, namely, Spanish lady 
gentleman, the Dutch patroon 
his wife, the Virginia planter and 
his wife, and the Puritan and his 
wife (4S7S2); casts of 9 prehistoric 
stone implements (4SSST7); models 
of a Viking ship and of the Santa 
Maria (48918). 

Prepared in the » Photographic 
Laboratory: 133 portraits of emi- 
nent persons associated with the dis- 
covery and history of America 
(48871) ; 1S colored enlargements of 
John White’s paintings, the originals 
being in the Grenville collection of 
the British Museum (48772) ; photo- 
graphs illustrating the history of 
the Capitol, copied from Glenn 
Brown's History of the Capitol 


(48773). 


and 
and 


> 


SmyTu, JOHN B., Renovo, Pa.: Lizard, 
Bumeces anthracium, from Pennsy!- 
vania (48762). 

SNELLING, W. O., Washington, D. C.: 


Specimen of silver-cobalt ore from 
Cobalt, Ontario, Canada (47952 
Snyper, BE. C., Dixon, Towa: Fossil 


brachiopod (48272); 5 specimens of 
rats) 


Niagaran fossils (488352). 

Snyper, W. E., Beaver Dam, Wis.: 
About 85 shells from various locali- 
ties (48847). 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


SouTHERN RAILWAY COMPANY, Wash- | 


ington, D. C.: 3 large masses of 
copper ore from Ducktown, Tenn., 
and a mass of pyrite from Lumpkin 
County, Ga. (48300). 

SoOUVIELLE, E. M., Jacksonville, Fla.: 
Tapeworm, Citlotacnia (47650). 

SPAULDING, W. H., Rhyolite, Nev.: 
Specimen of praying mantis, Stag- 
momantis carolina (ATSST). 


sp. 


Spencer, A. L., Oenaville, Tex.: Speci- 
men of helgramite fly, Corydalis cor- 
nuta (AT5S2). 


Sprnninc, H. L., MeclKeever, N. Y.: 
Water bug, Amorgius americanum 
(47678). 


SPRINGER, FRANK, Burlington, Iowa: 
Slab of Uintacrinus socialis (47783: 
deposit); collection of Japanese 
crinoidea, made by Alan Owston, of 
Yokohama (48497). 

STADTISCHES MUsEUM 
KUNDE. (See under 
miny.) 


FUR VOLKER- 
Leipzig, Ger- 


STAINS, WARREN L., Acoma, Nev.: 
mature specimen of Pseudosermyle 
truncata (47829). 

STANDLEY, J. E., Seattle, Wash.: Un- 
mounted photograph of native Ha- 
Waiian runners or message carriers 
(48344). 

STANDLEY, Pau C., Agricultural Col- 
lege, N. Mex.: Specimen of cactus, 
Opuntia arenaria, from New Mexico 
(48882). 

STATE DEPARTMENT: 

Crocodile skin transmitted by Eu- 
gene H. Plumacher, American con- 
sul, Maracaibo, Venezuela (48217). 

Models, photographic enlarge- 
ments, Charts, flags, and etching, ob- 
tained for the International Mari- 
time Exposition at Bordeaux, 1907 
(48691). 

STEELE, E. S., Washington, D. C.: 
plants collected in Virginia (47949: 
purchase; 47954); 27 plants from 
the vicinity of Washington, D. C. 
(48009 ). 


[33-49 
352 


Iim- 


108 


STERNBERG, CHARLES H., Lawrence, 
Kans.: Fossil turtle (48916: pur- 
chase). 

STEVENSON, Mrs. M. C., Bureau of 
American Ethnology, Washington, 
D. C.: Meadow mouse, Jlicrotus 


aztecus (47657). 


STODDARD, Dr, T. A., Culebra Hospital, 


Canal Zone, Panama: Bat, J/olos- 
sus, grasshopper, Titanacris velas- 


questi and a sphingid moth, Diludia 
lichenia (48284). 

STRECKER, JOHN K., jr., Waco, Tex.: 
40 lots of shells from Texas (47847). 

STUART, MisS CATHARINE C., Wash- 
ington, D. C.: An Onondaga Indian 
turtle rattle (48826): collection of 
brooches—specimens of  Troquoian 
silver work (48884); skirt of a 
Hupa Indian woman (48794). Pur- 
chase. 

Skull 

Aplodontia 


Stuur, F. A., Portland, Oreg.: 
of a mountain 
sp., and a puma, Felis oregonensis 
(48144); flying squirrel, 

and a mountain beaver, Ap- 

(48840). 

Suxsporr, W. N., Bingen, Wash.: 297 
plants from Washington State 
(48508: purchase). 

SUMSTINE, D. R., Wilkinsburg, 
28 specimens of fungi 

and 
exchange). 


beaver, 


Sciurop- 
terus, 
lodontia 


Pa. 
from Penn- 


svlvania other localities 
(48898 : 
Auckland, New Zea- 
land: 9 rare species of shells, in- 


cluding one cotype, from New Zea- 


SuTER, HeENrRy, 


land (48280). 

Sutro, THeroporr, New York City: 
18 historical marine paintings, by 
Edward Moran (48169: loan). 

SwarTHout, J. M., Bolivar, N. Y.: A 
specimen of Cicada sp., partly is- 
suing from the pupa skin (48155). 

SwINGLe, Mrs. L. W., Tucson, Ariz.: 
16 packages of algae (48198: loan). 

TANNER, JAMES, Washington, D. C.: 


Philippine rain coat (47902). 


OF 


104 REPORT 
National 
zircon sands, 
Fallston, 
(48550). 


Wirt, U. 8. 

Monazite and 
coneentrates = from 
(ce 


'TASSIN, 
seum : 
and 
Cleveland County, N. 

’EUBER, F. B. von, Jamestown Exposi- 
tion, Norfolk, Va.: Photograph of a 
group of Indians from the San Blas 

Panama (47764). 


(See under Haar- 


coast, 


TEYLER’S MUSEUM. 


lem, Netherlands. ) 
THOMPSON, Dr. J. C., U. S. Navy, 
Washington, ID. C.: Fishes and a 


starfish from the Tortugas Islands, 


Florida (4815S); 4 bats in alcohol 
from Shanghai, China (48414). 
THORNE, A. E., Twining City, D. C.: 


short-tailed 
(48407 ). 
THORNTON, Dr. W. F.. Bluefields, Nica- 

ragua: About 30 mosquitoes (48815). 


of the 
brevicauda 


2. specimens 


shrew. Blarina 


THurow, F. W., Harvester, Tex.: 10 | 
living specimens of cacti, Opuntia 
fuscoatra (AT9T5); 5 living speci- 


mens of caeti, Opuntia (4AT984) 55 
plants from Texas (48150). 

W., New 
specimens of 


photographs (4SSTS: purchase). 


ToumMey, J. Ifaven, Conn.: 


SST Cactaceae, with 


Tower, W. V., Porto Rico Agricultural 


Experiment Station, Mayaguez, 
PP. R.: 2 vials’ of mosquito: laryie; 


containing about 100 9 specimens 
(47595): 2 vials of mosquito larvae 
(47676). 

C. H., New 
brachiopods 


TOWNSEND, 
from 
County, 


near 
Pn. 


Devonian 
Meadville, 
(48729). 


Crawford 


Tracy, S. M., Biloxi, Miss.: Fern from 


Florida (47573) ; specimen of living 
eactus, Opuntia, from Florida 
(48650). 

TrAPiER, The Misses, Washington. 
D. C.: Piece of Flemish point lace 
(fifteenth century), pair of baby 
mitts, and a damask spread with 
gold fringe (48799: loan). 

TRASK, Mrs. BLuancur, Avalon, Cal.: 


Larva of sphinx moth, 
(478035) : snake, Lampropeltis 


from California (47872); 


Protoparee 
serta 


boylii, 


Mu- | 


NATIONAL 


York City: 8./| 


MUSEUM, 1908. 


TRASK, Mrs. BLANCHE—Continued. 
moth, Apantesis procima:; scorpions 
Uroctonus mordar; and a myriapod 
(48499) : living specimen of cactus, 
Opuntia, from Santa Catalina Island 
(48529) ; 3 living plants from Santa 
Catalina Island (48669). 

TREASURY DEPARTMENT: 

U.S. Mint, Philadelphia, Pa.: Half 


eagle, eagle, and double eagle 
(48770). 

U.S. Public Health and Marine- 
Hospital Service, San Francisco, 


Cale: Specimens of rats, Jus norwe- 
gicus and J. rattus, from San Fran- 
visco (4ST97T). 
TREGANZA, Epwarpb, Salt: Lake City, 
Utah: 5 species of land and fresh- 
water shells from Utah (48127). 
JUAN, Musen Nacional, 
Montevideo, Uruguay: 3 lizards from 


'TREMOLERAS, 


Montevideo (48288); 2 snakes and a 
lizard from (48310); 6 


o> 


birds’ skins from Uruguay (48570). 


Argentina 


lexchange. 


TREMPER, Dr. R. H., Ontario, Cales 2 
species of marine shells (48205) ; 


about GO specimens of Calliostoma 
supragranosta from, San Pedro, Cal. 
(48454). 

ristaAN, J. Fip, San José, Costa Rica : 
Crabs from Costa Rica (48802). 

W., U. S. National Museum : 

basket tray made by the 
Indians of southeastern 

(47582). 


TRUE, F. 
Twined 
Yakutat 
Alaska 

Tucker, I. 8., Dallas, Tex.: 10 speci- 

Inens representing 4+ species of Dip- 

tern (4NS662). 

TURCKHEIM, Baron II. von, Coban, 
Guatemala: 250 plans from Guate- 


Inala (48458); 141 plants from 
Guatemala (48836). Purchase. 
TuRNER, D. C., Washington, D. C.: 


Catbird, COPOLINCHSIS 


(48705). 


Galcoscoptes 


W. D., Dade City, Fla.: 
Praying mantis, Gonatista grisea 
(47761). ; 

UmBacu, L. M., Naperville, Ill.: 
plaints, Laciniaria, from Tlinois and 
Indiana (48241). 


'TURNLEY, 


os 
ps 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


UNIVERSITY COLLEGE. 
dee, Scotland. ) 


(See under Dun- 


Utau ANTIMONY CoMPANY, Butte, 
Mont.: Antimony oxide and stibnite 
from Antimony, Garfield County, 
Utah (48138). 

VaqueEz, J., Pantin (Seine), France: 
470 species of European fossil in- 


vertebrates: 3 boxes of fossils; 23 


fossil plants (47720: exchange). 

Vasey, R. W., Rogers Park, IIll.: 6 
plants, Laciniaria, from Illinois 
(478382). 


VAUGHAN, FrRANcIS E., West Haven, 


Conn.: 7 stone implements (47903) ; 
human skull from Marthas Vine- 


yard (48092) ; 12 arrow points from 

Arkansas (48561). Exchange. 

VEERHOFF, Otto L., L. C. Handy et al.: 
39 engravings, prints, and photo- 
graphs illustrating scenes and land- 
marks connected with the history of 
the United States (48774). 

VELIE, Dr. J. W., St. Joseph, Mich. : 
A collection of fishes from Florida 
(47983) ; 2 crabs, Panopeus herbstii, 
and a shrimp, Palaemonetes exilipes 
(48651). 


VERRILL, Prof. A. E., Yale University 


Museum, New Haven, Conn.: Inver- | 


tebrates from 
and Bermuda 
Leidya (48278). 
ViBerRT, C. W., South Windsor, Conn. : 
Indian skull from an ancient Indian 


Longe Island Sound 
(48202); 3 


burial place in South Windsor 
(48190). 
VIENNA, AUSTRIA, BOTANICAL GARDEN 


AND INSTITUTE OF THE ROYAL UNI- 
VERSITY : 18 specimens of fungi from 
Brazil (47571: exchange). 

VIENNA, AUSTRIA, RoYAL MUSEUM OF 
NATURAL History: Century 14 (em- 


bracing nos. 1301-1400, inclusive) 
of the “ Kryptogamae exsiccatae ” 


(48881 : exchange). 
VOLKART, HENRY, St. Gallen, Switzer- 
land: Photographs of Swiss-Danish 


heddles, and an <Armenian Jew 
weaving; piece of an Armenian 
string, and a quadrangular board 


from Tunis (47779: exchange) ; old 
Swiss heddle (47780). 


isopods, 


105 


VOORHEES, SAMUEL STOCKTON, Wash- 
ington, D. C.: Archeological objects 
from Hamilton County, Ohio 
(48454). 

WALCOTT, BENJAMIN STUART, Wash- 
ington, D. C.: 40 specimens of De- 
vonian fossils from Seneca Lake, 


N. Y. (48167). 


WALKER, E. M., Toronto, Ontario, Can- 


ada: An Orthopteron (47819: ex- 
change). 

WALLACE, Miss ELEANOR, New York 
City: Japanese traveler’s  candle- 
stick (48261). 

WALSINGHAM, Lord, Merton Hall, 


Thetford, England: 19 paratypes of 
Tineidae (47598). 

WALTON, W. R., 
specimens of 
(47828). 


her aes 
permagna 


Harrisburg, 
Nonagria 


WANSLEBEN, Miss E., Washington, D. 
C.: 2 specimens of Hymenoptera, 
Evania (ATT88). 

WAR DEPARTMENT: 

Office of Chief of Engineers: Con- 
cretions and stumps of fossil trees 
from near Pierre, S. Dak. (48000). 

Office of Chicf of Ordnanee: Spring- 
field rifle of the model of 1903, with 
the improvements of 1905 (48386) ; 3 
United States magazine rifles, cali- 
ber .30, model of 1903, with sword 
bayonets; 5 United States magazine 
gallery practice rifles, caliber .22, 
model of 1903, with sword bayonets ; 


6 sword bayonets for Springfield 
musketoons, model of 1842 (48759). 
Surgeon-Generals Office: Collec- 


tion of diatomaceous earths (48149). 
Army Medical Museum: An Indian 
necklace and a beaded belt (48395). 
Warpb’s NATURAL SCIENCE ESTABLISH- 
MENT, Rochester, N. Y.: 1,120 grams 


of Elm Creek, WKans., meteorite 
(47556): skull of a fossil beaked 


whale, Choueziphius liops (48046) ; 
skeleton of a porpoise, Stenorostra- 
tus, from Wellington, New Zealand 
(48555). Purchase. 

Wark, ALEX, King City, Cal.: 3 speci- 
mens of Pecten from the Upper Mio- 
cene of Monterey County, Cal. 
(48811). 


106 


WASHINGTON BIOLOGISTS’ FIELD CLUB, 


Washington, D. C.: About SOO in- 
sects from VPlummer’s Island, Md. 


(47933). 


WayNeE, ARTHUR T., Mount Pleasant, 
S: ¢:: 4 birds’ skins: (4767S)- 3 


(47752). 
WesBB, WALTER I*., Rochester, N. Y.: 
164 species of land-shells from the 


birds’ skins 


Mollendorff collection (48440: ex- 
change). 
WEDESTAEDT, GEO. S. VON, Goldfield, 


Ney.; Fossil bones (leg and foot) of 
a camel, Procamelus (7) robustus 
(48775). 

WEINBERG, FRANK, Woodside, N. Y.: 7 
living plants (47976: exchange). 
WEINSCHENCEK, W. F., & James- 
town Exposition, Norfolk, Va.: Box 
of solid alcohol and bottle of dena- 
tured alcohol, for lighting and heat- 
ing (47855). 
WELLMAN, Dr. 
delphia, Pa. 


O. 


I’. CREIGHTON, Phila- 
(through the American 


Society of Tropical Medicine) : 
About 150 specimens of Diptera 
from Benguella, West Africa 


(47979). 

WHEELER, Rey. H. E., Montevalla, Ala. : 
Land and fresh-water 
(47987) ; about 50 fresh-water shells 
from Alabama (48392) ; G specimens 


shells 


of Silurian corals from Greasy Cove, 


Ala. (48744). 
WHITE, Davip, U. S. Geological Sur- 


vey, Washington, D. C.: 
of fossil leaves. from 
Okla. (48204). 

Wuitrr, Maj. R., director of 
prison colony, Puerta Princessa, Pa- 
lawan, P. I. (received through Dr. 
HH. A. Mearns, U. 8S. Army) : 6 birds’ 
skins from (48079). 


Fragments 


near Cache, 


JOUN 


Palawan 


Waiter, R., Ybor City, Tampa, Fla.: 
Specimen of — silicified gasteropod 
(48870). 

WIDGEON, JOHN, Baltimore, Md.: 12 


Devonian fossils from the 
part of Maryland (48023). 


western 


WILCOX, GLENN A., Los Angeles, Cal.: 
10 specimens of living 
from (47868). 


Cactaceae 
Arizona 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


Witcox, Brig. Gen. T. E:, U. S. Army 
(retired), Washington, D. C.: 2 
specimens of cacti collected in Ari- 
zona (47T7T). 

WILCox, WALTER, Washington, D. C.: 
Specimens of native copper, calcite, 
and quartz; fossil insect (48263). 

WILKINS, THoMAS M., Washington, 
D. C.: A grasshopper bicycle (48854). 


WILLIAMS, Mrs. CAROLINE If., Quilcene, 
Wash.: Specimen of Juncus arcticus 
from Alaska (48281). 


WILLIAMS, Hamp, Hot Springs, Ark.: 
Sample of chalcedonic silica from 
near Hot Springs (47918). 


WILLIAMS, Miss HanNAH F., Wickliffe, 


Va.: Glass punch bowl captured 
from British officers at the = sur- 


render of Lord Cornwallis (12506: 
loan). 


WILLIAMS, I., La Salle, Ill.: Larva of 
a sphinx moth, Vhyreus abbottii 
(47609). 


WILLIAMSON, E. B., Bluffton, Ind.: 2 
paratypes of dragon fly. JMZnais 
carnshaici, from Burma (47610: ex- 
change) ; 51 insects from Texas, In- 
diana, and the Indian Territory 
(47716). 


WILLING, T. N., Regina, Saskatchewan, 
Canada: 1S mosquitoes and 20 lar- 
val skins (47599). 


Wiis, Morris W., Woodstock, Fla. : 
Tropical orb-weaving spider, Gas- 
teracantha cancriformis (48047). 


WiLuiston, Dr. S. W., University of 
Chicago, Chicago, Ill.: 2 specimens 
of Tachinidae collected by Uerbert 
H. Smith in Brazil (48417). 


Witmer, Col. L. WORTHINGTON, Lo- 
thian House, Ryde, Isle of Wight, 
England: Rocks, living and_ fossil 
shells, head of a sea gull, insects, 
alcoholie worms (47620). 


Witson, G. A., Lexington, Miss.: 
Sparrow hawk, Cerchneis sparverius 
(48176). 

Witson, H. H., Townville, Pa.: 3 pho- 
tographs and a sketch of “* Indian 
God Rock” (47821). 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


Murphysboro, Ill.: 
vermicu- 


WILSON, HIRAM, 
Fossil plant, Neuwropteris 
laris (48067). 

Wisk, K. S.: 12 mosquitoes from Brit- 
ish Guiana (48677). 

Woop, NELSON, U.S. National Museum : 
2 young jungle fowls, Gallus gallus, 


(47844); mounted specimen — of 
Liothrix lutea, and skin of a_ field 
sparrow. NSpizella pusilla (4SO78) ; 
specimen of an insect, Vabanus 
megerlei, from Auburndale, Fla. 
(48103). 

Woop, Gen. OLIVER ELLSwortH, U. S. 
Army, Washington, ID. C.: Collec- 
tion of Japanese brasses, bronzes, 


lacquer, etc. (48785: 

Wooton, E. O., Mesilla Park, N. Mex.: 
16 specimens and 4 photographs of 
cacti from New Mexico (48180); 8 
specimens of cacti from New Mexico 
(48571). 


loan). 


WoORLAND, GEORGE T., Havre, Mont.: 
Specimens of Jurassic fossils 


(48869). 

WORTHINGTON, THOMAS C., jr., Balti- 
more, Md.: Photographs of red bat, 
Lasiurus borealis, and young 

(48260). 


107 


WorRTHINGTON, W. W., Shelter Island 


Heights, N. Y.: 2 valves of Labiosa 
lineata from Amelia Island, Pla. 
(47585). 

WaricuT, A. C., Guadalajara, Mexico: 
Specimen of kissing bug, Rasahus 


biguttatus (ATG69S). 
WRIGHT, W. S. (See 
Field. ) 


under G. HH. 


WROUGHTON, R. C., London, England: 
127 Himalayan ferns (47940). 


YALE UNIVERSITY MusEuM, New Haven, 
Conn.: Cast of neural cavity of the 
sacrum of a Stegosaurus (48311: 
exchange) ; 10 specimens of Lacini- 
aria (48460: loan) ; 7 casts of Cera- 
topsia heads, and a east of the entire 


animal (48467: exchange). 
YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK, Yel- 
lowstone, Wyo. (received) through 


Lieut. Gen, S. B. M. Young, superin- 
tendent): Skin and_= skull of a 
grizzly bear, Ursus horribilis (48209). 


ZOLLIKOFER, WRNST H., St. Gallen, 
Switzerland: 100 European mam- 
mals (47730: purchase). 

ZOOLOGICAL MUSEUM. (See under 


Copenhagen, Denmark.) 


LIST OF PUBLICATIONS OF THE U. 8. NATIONAL 
MUSEUM ISSUED DURING THE FISCAL YEAR 1907-8, 
INCLUDING PAPERS PUBLISHED ELSEWHERE WHICH 
RELATE TO THE COLLECTIONS. 


PUBLICATIONS OF THE MUSEUM. 


ANNUAL REPORT. 


Smithsonian Institution | UnitedStates | | ending June 80, 1907 | [Seal] | 
National Museum | — | Report on | Washington | Government Printing 
the progress and con- | dition of the | Office | 1907 
U.S. National | Museum for the year | Svo;, pp: 1-dis, 

PROCEEDINGS. 

Smithsonian Institution | United States | Smithsonian Institution | United States 

National Museum | — | Proceedings National Museum | — | Proceedings 

of the | United States National | of the | United States National 

Museum | — | Volume XXXII |—]|]| Museum | — | Volume XXXIII 

[Seal] | Washington | Government | — | [Seal] | Washington | Gov- 
Printing Office | 1907 | ernment Printing Office | 1908 

8vo., pp. i-xvi, 1-767, pls. | 8vo., pp. i-xv, 1-750, pls. 

I-LXXNXII, figs. 168. I-LNV, figs. 144. 
BULLETINS. 

Smithsonian Institution | United States Recent Madreporaria | of the Ha- 
National Museum | — | Bulletin | waiian Islands and Laysan | by | T. 
of the | United States National Mu- Wayland Vaughan | Custodian of 
seum. | No. 50. | — | The Birds | of Madreporarian Corals, U.S. National 
| North and Middle America. | by | Museum | Geologist, U. S. Geological 


tobert Ridgway. | Curator, Division Survey | [Seal] | Washington | Goy- 


of Birds | — Part IV. | ernment Printing Office | 1907 
[Seal] | Washington: | Government 4to., pp. i-ix, 1-427, pls. 
Printing Office. | 1907. I-XCVI. 
8vo., pp. i-xxii, 1-973, pls. | Smithsonian Institution | United 
es States National Museum | Bulletin 
Smithsonian Institution | UnitedStates | 60 | — | The Barnacles  (Cirripe- 
National Museum | Bulletin 58 |— || dia) con- | tained in the collections 
Herpetology of Japan and | Adja- | of | the U. S. National Museum 
cent Territory | by | Leonhard Stej- by | Henry <A. Pilsbry | Special 
neger | Curator, Division of Reptiles Curator of the Department of Mol- 
and Batrachians — | With 35 lusea, Academy | of Natural Sci- 
plates and 409 figures | in the text | | ences of Philadelphia | [Seal] | 
[Seal] | Washington | Government = Washington | Government Printing 
Printing Office | 1907 Office | 1907 


Svo., pp. i-xx, 1-577, pls. | 8vo., pp. i-x, 1-122, pls. 
I-XXNXV, figs. 1-409. I-XI, figs. 1-36. 


Smithsonian Institution | United States | Smithsonian — Institution | United 
National Museum | Bulletin 59 | — | States National Museum | Bulletin 


109 


110 


61 — Variations and Genetic 

Relationships of the |  Garter- 
Snakes | by | Alexander G. Ruth- 
ven | Curator of the University Mnu- 
seum, University of Michigan, Ann 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908, 


Arbor | [Seal] | Washington | Goy- 
ernment Printing Office | 1908 
Svo., pp. i-xii, 1-201, pl. I, 
figs. 1-82. 


PAPERS PUBLISHED IN SEPARATE FORM. 


FROM VOLUME 35 OF TIIK PROCEEDINGS. 


No. 1556. An annotated list of Chara- 
cin fishes in the United 
States National Museuni 
and the museum of In- 
diana University, with de- 
seriptions of new 
By Carl #H. Eigenmann 
and Fletcher Ogle. pp. 1- 
36, figs. 1-8. 


species. 


7. Descriptions of new species 


of upper paleozoic fossils 


from China. By George 
H. Girty. pp. 3748. 
No. 1558. The  holothurians of the 


North Pacific coast of 
Nerth America collected 
by the Albatross in) 1903. 
By Charles Lincoln Ed- 
wards. pp. 49-68, figs. 1— 
12. 


No. 1559. Descriptions of new species 


of recent unstalked  crin- 
oids from the North Pa- 
cific Ocean. By Austin 


Hobart Clark. 


Notes on 


pp. 69-S4. 


No. 1560. parasites of Ber- 


muda fishes. By Edwin 
Linton. pp. 85-126, pls. 
I-XV. 


No. 1561. Descriptions of new species 
of recent unstalked  ecrin- 
oids from the 
Northeastern Asia. 
Austin Hobart Clark. 
127-156. 


coasts of 
By 
pp. 


Cirrhitoid 
3y David 


No. 1562. A review of the 


fishes of Japan. 


Starr Jordan and Albert 
Christian Herre. pp. 157- 


2Ot, tes, ly 2. 
On some ( Forfi- 
eulidz) collected in Guate- 


No. 1563. earwigs 


No. 1563—Continued. 
mala by Messrs. Schwarz 
and Barber. By Andrew 
Nelson Caudell. pp. 169- 
176. 

No. 1564. New marine mollusks from 


the west coast of America. 
By Paul Bartsch. pp. 177- 
1838. 
No. 1565. Supplementary notes on Mar- 
tyn’s Universal Concholo- 
By William Healey 
pp. 185-192. 


gist. 
Dall. 
Basketry bolo cause from Ba- 
By Otis T. 
pp. 1938-196, figs. 


No. 1566. 
silan Island. 
Mason. 


1-5. 


No. 1567. Descriptions of new North 
Tineid moths, 
with «a generic table of 
the family Blastobasidae. 
By Lord Walsingham. pp. 


197-228. 


American 


On «a collection of fishes 
from the Philippine Is- 
lands, made by Maj. Edgar 
A, Mearns, surgeon, U. S. 
Army, with descriptions of 
several new By 
Alvin Seale and Barton A. 
Bean. pp. 229-248, figs. 
1-8. 


No. L568. 


species, 


No. 1569. The West American  mol- 
lusks of the genus Tripho- 
By Paul sartsch,. 


pp. 249-262, pl. XvI. 


ris. 


On a collection of fishes from 
Echigo, Japan. By David 
Starr Jordan and Robert 
Earl Richardson. pp. 263— 
266, figs. 1-3. 


No. 1570. 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


No. 1571. The Dragonflies 
of Burma and Lower 
Siam. — IT. Subfamilies 
Cordulegasterinae, Chloro- 


(Odonata ) 


gomphinae, and Gomphi- 
nae. 3y Edward Bruce 
Williamson, pp. 267-317, 


figs. 1-39. 

No, 1572. Description of a new species 
of Willifish, Lucania 
browni, from a hot spring 
in Lower California. By 
David Starr Jordan and 
tobert HKarl Richardson. 
pp. 3819-821, 1 fig. 

North American parasitic 
copepods belonging to the 
family Caligidae. Parts 3 
and 4.—A revision of the 
Pandarinae and the Cecro- 
pinae. By Charles Branch 
Wilson. pp. 323-490, pls. 
XVII-XLIII, figs. 1-18. 

The Pyramidellid 
of the 
area. 
Dall and 
pp. 491 
XLVIII. 


No. 1573. 


No, 1574. mollusks 
Oregonian faunal 
William Healey 

Paul Bartsch. 


pls. XLIv— 


> 


B y 


43] 


—004, 


List of fishes collected in the 
river at Buytenzorg, Java, 
by Dr. Douglas Houghton 
Campbell. By David Starr 
Jordan and Alvin Seale. 


pp. 535-548, figs. 1, 2. 


No. 1576. A new Geckoid lizard from 
the Philippine Islands. By 
Leonhard Stejneger. — pp. 
545, 546. 

No. 1577. Mammals collected in west- 


ern Borneo by Dr. W. IL. 
Abbott. By Marcus Ward 
Lyon, jr. pp. 547-571, figs. 
AG sede THE | 
Two new ‘species 
from the Philippines. 
Leonhard Stejneger. 


573-576. 


No. 1578. of toads 
By 
pp. 
No. 1579. The pulque of Mexico. 

Walter Hough. = pp. 


5O2 fics: 1-19. 


$2065—09——_S8 


Halal 


No. 1580. North American parasitic co- 


pepods: new genera and 
species of Caliginae. By 
Charles Branch Wilson. 
pp. 598-627, pls. xirx—tvt. 
No. 1581. A review of the flatheads, 


gurnards, and other mail- 
cheeked fishes of the wa- 
ters of Japan. By David 
Starr Jordan and Robert 
Earl Richardson. pp. 629— 
670, figs. 1-9. 

No. 1582. Infrabasals in recent genera 
of the crinoid family Pen- 
tacrinitidae. By Austin 
Hobart Clark. pp. 671- 
676, figs. 1-8. 


No. 1585. A new species of flying lizard 


from the Philippine [s- 
lands. By Leonhard Stej- 
neger. pp. 677-679. 

No. 1584. A new fresh-water bivalve 
(Corneocyclas) from the 
mountains of Ecuador. By 
Paul Zartsch. pp. 681, 


682, 1 fig. 

No. 1585. The crinoid genus Comatula 
Lamarck; with a note on 
the Enerinus) parrae of 
Guerin. By Austin Hobart 
Clark. pp. 683-688. 

On some Isopods of the fam- 
ily Dajidae from the north- 
west Pacific Ocean, with 
descriptions of a new genus 
and two new species. By 
Harriet Richardson. — pp. 
689-696, figs. 1-7. 

No. 1587. Notes the fresh-water 

mollusk Planorbis magnifi- 
cus and descriptions of two 


No. 1586. 


on 


new forms of the same 
genus from the Southern 
States. By Paul Bartsch. 


pp. 697-7100, pl. Lv1t. 

No. 1588. On Ctenolucius Gill, a neg- 
lected of Characin 
nshes, notes the 

3y Barton 

701-703, 1 


genus 
with 
typical species. 
A. Bean. pp. 
fig. 


on 


112 REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908, 

No. 1589. Fresh-water crustacea from | No, 1590—Continued. 
Labrador and Newfound- Franklin, pp. 715-730, 
land. By Joseph A. Cush- pls. LX1I1I-LXV. 


man. 705-7138, pls. 


pp. 
LVIII-LXII. 


No. 1590. On a collection of Thysanop- 
terous insects from Barba- 
and St. 


lands. By flenry 


Vineent  is- 
James 


dos 


No. 1591. Schizopod crustaceans in the 
U. S. National Museum: 


Schizopods from Alaska. 
By Arnold I. Ortmann. 


pp. 1-10, pl. 1. 


FROM VOLUME 34 OF THE PROCEEDINGS. 


collection of 
the Gulf of 
Vera Cruz and 
Tampico. By David Starr 
Jordan and Mary Cynthia 
pp. 11-22, 


No. 1592. Notes on oa 


fishes from 


Mexico at 


figs. 


Dickerson. 
2 


No. 1593. The parasitic Isopod Leidya 


Distorta (Leidy) = found 
on a new host. By Har- 
riet Richardson. pp. 25 
26, figs. 144. 

No, 1594. Deseriptions of » four new 
species of | amphipodous 
crustacean from the Gulf 


of Mexico. By Arthur &. 


Pearse. pp. 27-382, 


144. 


figs. 


Description of  Pantosteus 
Santa-Anae, a new species 


of fish from the Santa 


Ana River, Cal. By John 
Otterbein Snyder. pp. | 
aa 9 
cles chokes 

No. 1596. Phe Dalmanellas of the 


Chemung formation, and a 
Closely related new Brach- 
iopod Thiemella. 
By Henry 38. 
pp. 35-64, pls. 11-rv. 


Fenus 


No. 1507. Descriptions of three new 
species of Saturnian 
moths. By William 


Schaus. pp. 65, G6. 


No. 1598. Deseription of a new Tsopod 
of the 
from Marthas 
By Harriet Richardson. 
pp. 67-69, figs. 1, 2. 


genus Wurycope 


Vineyard. 


Williams. | 


No, 1509. Notes on Western Or- 
thoptera; with the  de- 
scription of one new = spe- 
cies. By Nelson 
Caudell. pp. 71-81. 

On the revision of the mol- 
lusk genus Pterinea Gold- 
Ilenry Shaler 

pp. 838-90. 


solie 


Andrew 


No. 1600, 


fuss. Ay 
Williams. 


No. 1601. Descriptions of new species 


of South American Ge- 
ometrid moths. By Wil- 
liam Warren. pp. 91-110. 


No. 1602. Description of a new species 
of halfbeak (Hemiramphus 
from Naga- 
saki, Japan. By David 
Starr Jordan and Mary 
Cynthia  Diekerson. pp. 
LIA, DA, er ee 
Foraminifera 
the Hawaiian 
the steamer 
1902. By Rufus 
Bagg, jr. pp. 
pl. v. 
Descriptions of 


mioprorus ) 


No. 1608. collected near 
Islands by 
Albatross in 
Mather 
1138-172, 
No. 1604. new Cur- 
beetles of the 
By W. 


173- 


culionid 
tribe Anthonomini. 
Dwight Pierce. pp. 
1811. 


No. 1605. On three existing species of 


sen turtles, one of them 
(Caretta remivaga) new. 
By Oliver P. Hay. pp. 


183-198, pls. VI-XL. 


No. 1606. Three new species of lizards 


from the Philippine Is- 
lands. By Leonhard Stej- 
neger. pp. 199-204, figs. 
1-6. 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. dis hs 


No. 1607. New stalked crinoids from | No. 1610—Continued. 


the eastern coast of North cific coast of the United 
America. By Austin Ho- States, with notes on other 
bart Clark. pp. 205-208, mollusks from the sme 
figs. 1-3. region. By William 
No. 1608. Descriptions of new species Healey Dall. pp. 245-257. 


of crinoids, chiefly from | yo 1614 
the collections made by the 
U.S. fisheries steamer <Al- 
batross at the Hawaiian 
Islands in 1902; with re- 
marks on the classifiea- 
tion of the Comatulida. No. 1612. Some cases of abnormal arm 


. New species of cretaceous 
invertebrates from north- 
ern Colorado. sv) Junius 
Henderson. pp. 259-264, 
pl. X11. 


By Austin Hobart Clark. structure in recent crin- 

pp. 209-239. | oids. By Austin TWobart 

2 : Yark. . 265-270, figs. 

No. 1609. A new Amphipod crustacean, | Chats pp sata, Hes 


: : ae 15; 
Orchestoidea biolleyi, from | : 


Costa Rica. By Thomas | no. 1613. The 
R. R. Stebbing. pp. 241- | 
244, pl. x11, figs. 1, 2. 


crinoid genus Eudio- 

erinus, with description of 

a new species. By Austin 

No. 1610. Descriptions of new species Hobart Clark. pp. 271- 
of mollusks from the Pa- to, wes 


FROM VOLUME 10 OF CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM. 


Part 5. Report on the diatoms of the Albatross voyages in the Pacific Ocean, 
1SSS-1904. By Albert Mann. (Assisted in the bibliography and citations by 
P. L. Ricker.) pp. i-viii, 221-442, pls. xLIv-Liv. 

Part 6. The Cyperaceae of Costa Rica. By C. B. Clarke (deceased). pp. 
i-vii, 4484471. 

Part 7. Studies of tropical American ferns.—No. 1. By William R. Maxon. 
pp. i-viii, 473-508, pls. LY—Lvt1. 


FROM VOLUME 12 OF CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM. 


Part 1. Catalogue of the botanical library of John Donnell Smith presented 
in 1905 to the Smithsonian Institution. Compiled by Alice Cary Atwood. pp. 
i-iii, 1-94. 

Part 2. The Lechythidaceae of Costa Rica. By H. Pittier de Fabrega. pp. 
i-vii, 95-101, pls. 1-vii, figs. 1-4. Tonduzia, a new genus of Apocynaceae from 
Central America. By H. Pittier de Fabrega. pp. 103-104, pl. 1x, figs. 5, 6. A 
collection of plants from the vicinity of La Guaira, Venezuela. By J. R. John- 
ston. pp. 105-111. 


Part 8. Types of American grasses. By A. 8S. Hitcheock. pp. i-v, 113-158, i-v. 


114 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


CLASSIFIED LIST OF PAPERS BASED WHOLLY OR IN PART ON THE NATIONAL 
COLLECTIONS.® 


MUSEUM ADMINISTRATION. 


RarHBpun, Ricwarp. Report on the 
progress and condition of the U. S. 
National Museum for the year end- 
ing June 30, 1907. 


Rep. Sinithsonian Inst. (U.N. 
Nat. Mus.), 1907, pp. 1-118. 


ETHNOLOGY, ARCHEOLOGY, 


IXMMONS, GeEoRGE T. The Chilkat 
blanket. 

Memoirs, Am, Mus. Nat. Hist., 

iT, Pi TV, Dec, Voor, ap. 


329-401, pls. xXIV—xxXvVII, figs. 
536-592. (Based partly on 
Museum specimens. ) 

This paper is an exhaustive mono- 


graph on the ‘t Chilkat blanket,” an 
exquisite piece of weaving in wool, 


harmonious in coloring, and original 
in design, which forms the dis- 
tinctive ceremonial robe of the sey- 
eral tribes of the North Pacifie coast. 


The paper begins with the tradi- 
tional and actual history of the 


which is followed by a dis- 
cussion of the technic. The designs 
are explained by Dr. Franz Boas. 
Mr. Emmons’s’ material col- 
lected from Chilkat almost 
exclusively and forms a valuable 
contribution to our knowledge of the 
textile works of the American In- 
dians. 


blanket, 


Was 


sources 


FEWKES, J. WALTER. Excavations at 
Casa Grande, Ariz., in 1906-7. 

Smithsonian Mise. Colls., WL, 

Quar. issue, Pt. 3, No. 1773, 

Oct. 25, 1907, pp. 289-329, 


pls. XXIII-xL, figs. 117-122. 

The paper is a report of progress 
certain unfinished archeological 
work conducted by Doetor Fewkes 
under a special appropriation, and 
on the repair and protection of the 
Casa Grande ruins, and = deseribes 
the work the year 1906-7, illus- 
trating the ruins exposed and giving 
detailed plans of the buildings and 
Incidentally, a number 
of the relics of art obtained during 
the explorations and placed in the 
Museum are described and_ illus 
trated, 


on 


of 


inclosures. 


FINE ARTS. 


Brockett, PauLt. The National Gal- 
lery of Art. 

The Sketch 

Nov., 

pls. 


Book, 
1907, pp. 


\1, No. 6, 
269-276, 5 


PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY. 


TlopMres, WILLIAM Hl. On a nephrite 
statuette from San Andrés Tuxtla, 
Vera Cruz, Mexico. 


Am, Anthropologist (nm. s.) Ix, 
No. 4, Oct.—Dee., 1907, pp. 
691-701, pls. xxxIV—-XLI. 

The paper records all data ac- 
quired regarding the origin of a 
most remarkable specimen of jade 


carving, reputed to have been plowed 
up at San Andrés. The specimen is 
earefully described and the several 
series of glyphie decorations — en- 
graved on its surface have’ been 
studied by the best American ex- 
perts in this field, and the views of 
these experts are included in the 
paper. 


Hovuacn, Water. Antiquities of the 
Upper Gila and Salt River valleys in 
Arizona and New Mexico. 


Bull. XXXV, Bur. Am. Eth., 
1907, pp. 1-96, pls. I-XI, figs. 
1-51. 


The bulletin is a catalogue of the 
ruins in the region mentioned in the 
title and embodies plans and descrip- 
tions of the locations of various an- 
tiquities, mainly discovered by the 
author during explorations carried 
on under the auspices of the Na- 
tional Museum during 1901, 1903, 
1905, collections from which are in 
the National Museum. It is pre- 
ceded by a short résumé of the 
veoeraphic history of the ancient 
and recent inhabitants and the cul- 
ture of the region. The ruins are 
described in some detail and are 
located on a map. There is also a 
bibliography. Much of the work was 
rendered possible by the generous 
cooperation with the Museum of Mr. 
P. G. Gates, of Pasadena, Cal. 


“Ina few instances papers which were published prior to this fiscal year are 
included, having been omittted inadvertently from previous reports. 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


Houcu, WaAtter. Proceedings of the 
Anthropological Society of Washing- 
ton. Meetings from November 15, 
1907, to May 26, 1908. 

Am. Anthropologist (n. s.) x, 
Nos. 1 and 2, Jan.—Mar., 1908, 
and May—June, 1908, pp. 117— 
121, and 285-295,  respect- 
ively. 

Abstracts and résumés of papers 
read before the society. Some of 
these papers are based upon the col- 

lections of the National Museum. 


——— Anthropology in education for 
the foreign service. 

Am. anthropologist (n. s.) Ix, 

No. 4, Oct.—Dec., 1907, pp. 


T68—770. 

This paper embodies a suggestion 
that consuls, on appointment, should 
be instructed in the work of 
the various governmental institu- 
tions in Washington, acquiring in- 
formation useful to them in the pur- 
suit of their duties in foreign coun- 
tries. The paper asserts that the 
basis of such education is anthropo- 
logical and recommends that the 
Smithsonian Institution and its bu- 
reaus be utilized to furnish practical 
instruction as to racial traits and 
arts. 


The pulque of Mexico. 
Proc. U. 8S. Nat. Mus., 
No. 1579, Feb. 18, 1908, 
figs. 1-19. 
This paper is the result of the 


5TT-592, 


study of the collections in the Na- | 
tional Museum relating to the pulque | 


industry, mostly Dr. 
Edward Valmer, supplemented by 
the author's personal examination 
of the industry in the field. The 
origin of the use of pulque is dis- 


cussed and a brief statement of the 


procured by 


XXII: || 
pp. | 


115 


Iloucnu, WALTeER—Continued. 
great importance of the plant in the 
civilization of Mexico is set forth. 
Hrpricka, ALES. Skeletal remains 
suggesting or attributed to early 
man in North America. 


Bull. XXNIII, Bur. Am. Eth., 
1907, pp. 1-113, pls. I—xx1, 
figs. 1-16. 


A review and critical examination 
of all such osteological specimens in 
North America as have been claimed, 
or seemed, to represent a geologic- 
ally ancient man on this continent. 
The finds dealt with are the New 
Orleans skeleton; the Quebec skele- 
ton; the Natchez pelvic bone; the 
Lake Monroe, Fla., bones; the Soda 
Creek skeleton; the Charleston, S. 
C., bones; the Calaveras skull; the 
Rock Bluff, Ill.. cranium; the man 
of Penon, Mexico; the crania of 


Trenton; the Trenton femur; the 
Lansing skeleton; the fossils of 


western Florida; and the Nebraska 
“Loess man.” The conclusions 
reached are that thus far there are 
no solid foundations for considering 
any of the specimens of geological 
antiquity. The paper is supple- 
mented by a description of a num- 


ber of modern low-forehead skulls 
from the National Museum collec- 


tions. 
Mason, Otis T. Basketry bolo case 
from Basilan Island. 
Proc. U. 8S. Nat.. Mus., xxxitt, 
No. 1566, Oct. 25, 1907, pp. 
193-196, figs. 1-5. 
Structurally, this object illus- 
trates the technical processes  util- 
ized by the primitive peoples of Ma- 
laysia in bamboo and_ rattan. 
Functionally, it takes the place of 
the traveling bag of the more ciy- 
ilized peoples. 


MAMMALS. 


ALLEN, J. A. Notes on Solenodon para- 


doxus Brandt. 

Bull. Amer. Mus.Nat. Hist., xxiv, 
June 8, 1908, pp. 505-517, pls. 
XXVIII-XXXIII, figs. 1—9. 

Describes (not as new) the Hai- 
tian Solenodon paradorus and makes 
comparisons between it and_ the 
Cuban 8S. cubanus, three specimens 
of the latter being lent to Doctor 
Allen for that purpose. Skull of 
Cat. No. 87983 U. S. National Mu- 
seum is figured on pls. XXIX, XXx, 
and XxXXI. 


Cary, Merritt. <A Colorado record for 
Callospermophilus wortmani, with 
notes on the recent capture of An- 
trozous pallidus. 


Proc. Biol, Soc. Washington, 
xx, Decs 117 1907, pp: 85. 86. 


Records Callospermophilus  awort- 
mani as new for Colorado from 
specimens in the Biological Survey 
collection; and makes remarks 
the occurrence of Antrozous 
lidus in Colorado, 


on 
pal- 


116 


Notes on at 
the 


Lyon, Marcus WARD, jr. 


collection Of mammals from 
province of Kan-su, China, 
Misc. Oolls., Ut, 
No: 17:26, 


oo 2eQ 
133-138, 


Smithsonian 
Quar. issue, Pt. 2, 
July 9, 1907, pp. 

pls, XV—XVI. 
Systematic account of small col- 
lection of mammals made in the 
province of Kan-su by W. W. Simp- 


son. New species: IJyotalpa  can- 
sus, p. 184; Ochotona cansus, p. 
136. 


— Mammals collected in western 
Borneo by Dr. W. L. Abbott. 
Proc. U. 8S. Nat. Mus., XXXII, 
No. 1577, Dec. 24, 1907, pp. 
547-572, figs. A and B, and 
map. 

A systematic account of 
mals collected by Dr. W. LU. 
in western Borneo in 1905. New 

Nciurus sanggaus, p. 5543 
Neiurus borneocensis 


mam- 
Abbott 


species : 
new 
palustris, p. 555. 


subspecies, 


eollection of mammals 


Batu 


= | ON hh 
from the 
Sumatra, 
Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., 8th ser., I, 
No. 2, Feb., 1908, pp. 136— 
140. 
A systematic list of a 


Islands, west of 


small col- 


lection of mammals in the British 
Museum from some of the Batu 
group. Sent for identification ana 
comparison with types of Malayan 
mammals in the U. S. National Mu- 
seum. New. species: Cynocephalus 
tellonis, p. 139, type in British 
Museum, 


Merriam, C. Harr. Descriptions of 
ten new kangaroo rats. 

Proc. Biol. Soe. Washington, 

zx, July 22, 1907, pp: T4—719. 

Descriptions of the following new 

species and subspecies, all but one in 

the Biological Survey collection : J)i- 

podomys spectabilis cratodon, p. 75% 

D. nelsoni, p. TH: D. platyeephalus, 

p. 76; D. margaritae, p. TO; D. in- 

sularis, p. 703, D. kernen- 
sis, p. TT; Perodipus 

78 (Merriam collection) ; 2. 

ensis, p. 78; P. perplerus, p. 

P. simulans peninsularis, p. 79. 


merriami 
stephensi, p. 
Morro 


79; 


—— Three rodents from Colo- 


rado, 


new 


Biol. 
June 9, 


Noe. Washington, 
1908, pp. 145, 


Proce. 
S51; 
144. 
Deseribes 
from 


three 
specimens in 


new 
the 


subspecies 
Biological 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


Merriam, C. IArr—Continued. 
Survey collection: Hutamias 
mus caryi, p. 148; Neotoma 
gula warreni, p. 148; 
talpoides agrestis, p. 144. 


mini- 
albi- 
Thomomys 


Four rodents from = Cali- 


fornia. 


hew 


Proce. Biol. Soc. Washington, 
xxI, June 9, 1908, p. 145-147. 
Based on specimens in Biological 
Survey collection. New — species: 
Thomomys mewa, p. 146. New sub- 
species: Microtus  mordaxr — bernar- 
dinus, p. 145; M. oregoni adocetus, 
p. 145; Thomomys alpinus awahnee, 
p. 146. 


MILLER, GERRIT S., jr. Some new 
European Insectivora and Carnivora. 
Nat. Hist., 
119, Nov., 


7th ser., 
1907, pp. 


Ann. Mag. 
xx; No, 
389-398. 

Describes ten new European mam- 


mals of the genera Crocidura, Vul- 
pes, Meles, Putorius, and Felis, 


from material in the British Museum. 


Four new European squirrels. 


Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., Tth ser., 
xx, No. 119, Nov, 2907, pp: 


426-430. 
Describes four new subspecies of 
the Kuropean squirrel, Sciurus vul- 
garis, from specimens in the British 


Museum. 
———'T'wo new mammals from Asia 
Minor. 
Ann, Mag. Nat. Hist., Sth ser., 
I, No. 1, Jan., 1908, pp. 
68-70. 


Describes a new species of Veomys 
and of Muscardinus from material 
in the British Museum. 


——— The recent voles of the Micro- 
tus nivalis group. 
Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., Sth ser., 
1, No. 1, Jan., 1908, pp. 97— 
103. 

Creates the subgenus Chinomys for 
the Microtus nivalis group deserib- 
ing all the members of the subge- 
nus, including three new species and 
one new subspecies. Based on mate- 
rial in the British Museum. 


Altum’s squirrel names. 
Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., 8th ser., 
1, No. 1, Jan., 1908, pp. 127, 
128. 

Discusses the status of some 
names applied to forms of the Ku- 
ropean squirrel by Altum in the sec- 
ond edition of Forstzoologie, 1876. 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


MILLER, GeRRIT S., jr. Highteen new 
European voles. 
Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., Sth ser., 
1, No. 2, Feb., 1908, pp. 194— 
206. 

Describes 18 new species and sub- 
species in the genera 
Arvicola, Microtus, and 
mainly from material in the 
Museum. 

Newtson, KE. W. Descriptions of new 
North American rabbits. 

Proc. Biol. Washington, 

xx, July 1907, pp. 81-84. 

Descriptions of the following new 
species and all in the 
collection of the Biological Survey : 
Lepus californicus magadalenae, p. 
81; Sylvilagus cognatus, p. S82; N. 
floridanus restrictus, p. 82; = S. 


Pitymys, 
Sritish 


Soc. 
oe 


subspecies 


floridanus similis, p. S23 8S. audu- 
boni vallicola, p. 82; 8. auduboni 
cedrophilus, p. 88; S. auduboni neo- 
mericanus, p. 83; S. auduboni war- 


reni, p. 833; S. mansuetus, p. 83; 8. 
bachmani exriguus, p. S84. 

Descriptions cf two new sub- 
species of North American mammals. 


Proc. Biol. Washington, 
xx, Dec. 11, 1907, pp. 87, 88. 


Noe. 


Describes as new — subspecies : 
Lepus bairdi cascadensis, p. ST (in 
the Museum of Comparative Zo- 


ology) and NSciurus socialis littoralis, 
p. S87, Biological Survey collection. 


NICHOLS, JOHN TREADWELL. Notes on 
two porpoises captured on a voyage 


into the Pacific Ocean. 


Evotomys, 


117 


NiIcHoLs, JOHN TREADWELL—Cont'd. 


Pacific Ocean and makes compari- 
son with specimens in the U. 8. 
National Museum. 
Oscoop, WiLtrrep TH. A new white- 
footed mouse from Alaska. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, 
Xx1, June’ 9; 1908, pp. 241, 
142. 
Describes the new species, Pero- 
myscus hylacus, p. 141, Biological 


Survey collection. 


Truk, F. W.) Observations on the type 
specimen of the fossil cetacean Ano- 
plonassa forecipata Cope. 

Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., ut, No. 
4, July, 1907, pp. 97-106, 
pls. I-III. 


On 


of fossil 


the 
cetaceans 


occurrence of remains 
of the 
Schizodelphis in the United States, 


genus 


and on Priscodelphinus (7?) eras- 
sangulum Case. 

Smithsonian Mise. Colls.,  , 

Quar. issue, pt. 4, No. 1782, 

Jan. 27, 1908, pp. 449-460, 


pls. LIX—LXx. 


Remarks on the fossil cetacean 
Rhabdosteus latiradix Cope. 


Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci., Phila., 
Apr. 22, 1908, pp. 24-29, one 
plate, figs. 1-5. 


Occurrence of three species of 
beaked whales of the genus Mesoplo- 


Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., ; : 

XXIV, Feb. 26, 1908, pp. don on the Atlantic coast of the 
217-219, pl. x1v, figs. 1-3. United States. 

Describes (not as new) two _ por- Science (n. s.), Xxvit, No. 675, 

poises secured by the writer in the Dec. 6, 1907, p. 796. 
BIRDS. 
Bancs, OuTRAM. On a collection of | BaANGs, OurRAM—Continued. 
birds from western Costa Rica, (p. 806), and Buarremon  costa- 
ricensis (p. 310), 


Auk, xxiv, No. 3, July, 1907, pp. 
287-312. 

An annotated list of 238 species 
and subspecies collected in the Bo- 
ruca district of Costa Rica. Twelve 
forms are recorded not hitherto 
known from this country, and the 
following are described new to 
science: Micrastur  interstes — (p. 
289), Gymnocichla nudiceps — erra- 
tilis (p. 297), Synallaxis 
latitabunda = (p. 298), 
laptes sancti-thomae hesperius (p. 
299), Leptopogon pileatus faustus 
(p 300), Cyanerpes lucidus isthmicus 


as 


as 


albescens 
Dendroco- 


On certain Costa Rican birds. 
Proc. New Engl. Zoodl. Club, tv, 
Mar. 19, 1908, pp. 23—35. 
Remarks on 18 forms of Costa 
tican birds, of which the following 
are designated new: Trogon wun- 
derwoodi (p. Pachyrhamphus 


as 


24), 


versicolor  costaricensis  (p. 26), 
Myiobius vanthopygus aureatus (p. 
27), Troglodytes ochraceus ligea (p. 


29), Myioborus aurantiacus acceptus 
(p. 80), Phlogothraupis sanguino- 
lenta aprica (p. 31), and Hmberi- 
zoides sphenura lucaris (p. 384). 


118 


BANGS, OUTRAM, and PEcK, Morton E. | 
On some rare and new birds from 
British Honduras. 

Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., xXx, 
Feb. 29, 1908, pp. 43-46. 
Limnopardalus maculatus insolitus 
(po. 48), Antrostomus badius (p. 44), 
Troglodytes irrequies (p. 45), and 
Coturniculus  savannarum — eracens 
(p. 45) are described as new, and 
remarks are offered on seven other 
species. 

CARRIKER, M. A., jr. Brief descrip- 
tions of some new species of birds 
from Costa Rica and a record of 
some species not hitherto reported 
from that country. 


Annals Carnegie Mus., Iv, Nos. 
tli and Iv, Apr., 1908, pp. 
301-302. 

Formicarius castaneiceps and 


Sporophila crissalis are described as 

new, and seven other species are 

noted as “new records from Costa 

Rica.” 
Cookk, Weitts W. Bird migration in 
the District of Columbia. 
Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., xxi, 
Apr. 11, 1908, pp. 107-118. 

A complete list of the birds of the 

District of Columbia, with the dates 

of arrival and departure of the 

migratory species, and dates of oc- 

currence of the ‘rare or casual 

visitors.” 293 are enu- 
merated. 


species 


Kkirkwoop, FF. C. Chestnut-collared 


longspur  (Calcarius ornatus) in 
Maryland. 
Auk, xxv, No, 1, Jan., 1908, p: 
84, 
First record of the chestnut-col- 


lared longspur from Maryland. 
Mearns, Epcar A. Two additions to | 
the avifauna of the Philippines. 
Philippine Journ. NSei., 11, No. 5, 
pect. A, Oct., 2907, p: dod. 
Butorides spodiogaster and NSpodi- 
opsar cineraccus are noted as new to 
the Philippine avifauna. 


—— Descriptions of a new genus and 
nine new species of Philippine birds. 
Philippine Journ. Sci., 11, No. 5, 


bect. A; Oct., 1907, pp: 355- 
360. 
The following species, obtained 


during the author's explorations in 
the Philippines, are described as 
new: Valindangia  megregori— (p. 
355), Centropus carpenteri (p. 356), 
Cyornis mindorensis (p. 356), Rhipi- 


dura hutchinsoni (p. 3857), Hypsi- 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


MEARNS, EDGAR A.—Continued. 
petes batanensis (p. Merula 
malindangensis — (p. Merula 
mayonensis (p. 858), Geocichla min- 
danensis (p. 359), and Zosterops 
halconensis (p. 860). Malindangia 
(p. 855) is a new genus of Campe- 
phagidae. 
MILLER, W. DEWITT. A review of the 
manakins of the genus Chiroxiphia. 
Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., xxiv, 
Art. x1Ix, May 2, 1908, pp. 
331-843, pl. xxv. 

The author recognizes S species, 
of which Chiroxriphia napensis (p. 
388) is described and figured as 
new. Each species is fully dis- 
cussed, and a key to the various 
forms, followed by a table of meas- 

urements, completes the paper. 


357), 


357), 


OBERHOLSER, HARRY C. 
from Cannda. 


A new Agelaius 


Auk, xxiv, No. 38, July, 1907, 
pp. 3382-336. 
Agelaius phaniceus arctolegus is 
described as new (p. 3832). 

Peck, Morron FE. (See under Out- 

ram Bangs.) 
Ripaway, Roserr. The Birds of | 
North and Middle America: A 


of the | 
higher groups, genera, species, and 
subspecies of birds | 


descriptive catalogue | 
known to occur 
in North America, from the | Arctic 
lands to the Isthmus of Panama, 
the West Indies and other islands 


of the Caribbean Sea, and the | Gal- 
apagos Archipelago. | By | Robert 
Ridgway Curator, Division of 
Birds | — | Part IV Family 
Turdidae—Thrushes. | Family Zele- 
doniidae—Wren-Thrushes. Family 
Mimidae—Mockingbirds. Family 
Sturnidae—Starlings. Family Plo- 
ceidae—Weaver Birds. | Family 


Alaudidae—Larks. | Family Oxy- 
| 

runcidae—Sharp-bills. Family Ty- 

rannidae—Tyrant  Flycatchers. | 

Family Pipridae—Manakins. | Famn- 

ily Cotingidae—Chatterers. — | 

t 

Washington : Government Print- 
ing Office. | 1907. | 

Bull. 50 (Pt. Iv) U. SS. Nat. 

Mus. pp. i-xxii, 1-973, pls. 

I-xxxIv, July 1, 1907. 
The present volume embraces 424 
species and subspecies and 105 gen- 


a 


era, distributed through the above 
families. The diagnostic characters 


REPORT OF NATIONAL 


Riwcway, Roperr—Continued. 
of the genera are illustrated by 119 
outline drawings in the 34 plates 

accompanying the volume. 
Zeledonia insperata (p. T2), Sem- 
narchus (p. 689), and Myiarchus 
magister nelsoni (p. 903), are new. 


1908. 119 


MUSEUM, 


Ripcway, Rosperr—Continued. 

With the completion of this part, 
the number of species and subspecies 
described reaches a total of 1,675, 
or a little more than half of the 
known forms of North and Middle 
America. 


REPTILES AND BATRACHIANS. 


Hay, Oniver P. On three existing spe- 
cies of sea-turtles, one of them (Ca- 
retta remivaga) new. 


Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus. XXxXIv, 
No. 1605, May 4, 1908, pp. 
183-198, pls. VI-XI. 

Caretta remivaga, new species ; 


type, No. 99738, U. S. National Mu- 

seum. All of the material upon 

which this paper is based is in the 
National Museum. 

RUTHVEN, ALEXANDER G. Variations 

and Genetic Relationships of the 

| Garter-Snakes | by | Alexander G. 

Ruthven | curator of the University 

Museum, University of Michigan, 

Ann Arbor | [seal] | Washington 

~ ; . . L . > 

Government Printing Office | 1908. 

Bull. U. S. Nat. Mus. No. 61, 
June 24, 1908, pp. i-xii, 
1-201, pl. 1, figs. 1-82. 

A monographie treatment of the 
genus Thamnophia, tracing the prob- 
able origin and genetic relation of 
the various species and subspecies. 
The 


paper is based largely upon 
material in the National Museum, 
and also on collections in the pos- 


session of the author, as well as in 
the museums at Philadelphia, Chi- 
cago, and New York. 

STEJNEGER, LEONHARD. Herpetology 
of Japan and | Adjacent Territory | 
by | Leonhard Stejneger | Curator, 
Division of Reptiles and Batrachi- 
ans | — | With 35 plates and 409 
figures | in the text | [seal] | Wash- 
ington | Government Printing Office 


| 1907. 
Bull. U. S. Nat. Mus., No. 58, 
Aug. 9, 1907, pp. i-xx, 1-577, 
pls. I-xxxv, figs. 1-409. 
A full account of the batrachians 


and reptiles of Japan, including For- 
mosa and Sakhalin, Korea, and Man- 


churia, based upon the study of 
more than 1,500 specimens, mostly 
in the National Museum, but nu- 


merous types and other specimens 1n 
the British Museum and in the mu- 


STEJNEGER, LEONHARD—Continued. 


seums of Tokyo, Leiden, Hamburg, 
Frankfurt a/M, ete., were also ex- 


amined. 


A new geckoid lizard from the 
Philippine Islands. 


Proc. U. 8S. Nat. Mus. XXXIIlI, 
No. 1576, Dec. 24, 1907, pp. 
545, 546. 


Luperosaurus macgregori, new 
species; type No. 36191, U. S. Na- 
tional Museum. 

Two new species of toads from 

the Philippines. 


Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXXIII, 
No. 1578, Feb. 18, 1908, pp. 


573-576. 
Phrynixralus 
type, No. 
stellatus, new species ; 


87375, U. S. National 


anulatus, new 
35399 ; Kalophrynus 
type, No. 


Museum. 


spe- 


cies ; 


A new species of flying lizard 
from the Philippine Islands. 


Proc. U. 8S. Nat. Mus., XXXIII, 
No. 1583, Feb. 29, 1908, pp. 
677-679. 

Draco mindanensis, new species ; 
type, No. 37388, U. 8S. National 
Museum. 

——— Three new species of lizards 
from the Philippine Islands. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXXIV, 


No. 1606, 
199-204. 


May 4, 1908, pp. 


Sphenomorphus atrigularis, new 
species; type, No. 37386, U. S. Na- 
tional Museum ; Sphenomorphus 
steerci, new species; type, No. 
82658, U. S. National Museum; 


Tropidophorus misaminius, new spe- 
9F9Qo 


type, No. 37383, U. S. National 
Museum. 


cies ; 


The status of the Japanese soft- 
shelled turtles. 
Science (n. s.), XXVII, No. 697, 
May 8, 1908, pp. 746-748. 
Supplementary notes to the treat- 
ment of the subject in The Her- 
petology of Japan. ; 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


FISHES. 


BEAN, BARTON A. <A from 
Chesapeake Bay. 
Forest and Stream, LXix, No. 
5, Aug. 3, 1907, pp. 178-179. 
An authentie record of the capture 
of Cyclopterus lumpus, in Chesa- 
peake Bay near Fortress Monroe. 


lump-fish 


——— On Ctenolucius Gill, a neglected 
genus of Characin fishes, with notes 
on the typical species. 

Proc. U. 8S. Nat. Mus., 
No. 1588, Mar. 4, 1908, pp. 
701-7038, 1 fig. 
Establishing the Ctenolu- 
cius, for many years overlooked, 


genus 


(See also under Alvin Seale.) 


DICKERSON, Mary (CYNTHIA. (See 


under David Starr Jordan.) 
EIGENMANN, Car. H., 
FLETCHER. An annotated list of 
Characin fishes in the U. S. National 
Museum and the museum of Indiana 


and OGLE, 


University, with descriptions of new 
species. 

Proc. OU. 8&8. Nat. 

No. 1556, Sept. 

1-36, figs. 1-8. 

One hundred and twenty fishes are 

listed and the following are de 

scribed as new: Curimatus brevipes ; 

C. leuciscus Prochilodus 


Musi, SXXITI,; 
10, 1907, pp. 


boliviae ; 
beani; Parodon 


piracicabae : 


Paraguayensis : 7. 
Chei- 
rodon vibeiroi; C. micropterus ; Odon- 
Iphyocharar 
Holo- 


Leporinus parae; 
tostilbe microcephalus ; 
rathbuni; A. 
riddlei;  Hemigrammus — mi- 
cropterus; TH. tridens; IT. boulen- 
geri; H. anisitsi; H. santae; H. in- 
Astyanar rutilus 
gquensis ; A. emperador; A. orthodus ; 
1. atratoensis; A. megalops; Chara 
atratoensis, 


Stramineus : 
pristes 


CONSTANS nNiCare- 


The remarkable 
story of a Greek fish. the Glanis. 


GILL, ‘THEODORE. 


Geo. Washington Univ. Bull., 
vy, No. 4, Dee., 1906, pp. 5- 
18, figs. 1-3. 


After a_reference to the Wels 
(Silurus glanis), the various pas- 
sages of Aristotle relative to the | 


Glanis are reproduced. teference 3 
to them by Cuvier and Valenciennes, 
Apostolides, Smith, and PBoulenger 
connecting them with the Wels are 
noticed, The differences between 
the Wels and Glanis are then = con- 
trasted, and agreement is declared 
with Agassiz, Garman, Jordan, and 


REXIII, 


GInL, THropore—Continued. 
Hoffman, who recognized the 
Glanis as a very distinct species— 
Parasilurus aristotelis. It is for 
the first time illustrated by 38. fig- 
ures obtained from the Smithsonian 
Institution. 


———Le Tondule (Fundula eyprino- 
donta) of Carbonnier an Umbra. 

Science (n. s.), xxiv, No. 625; 

Dec. 21, 1906, pp. 818-819. 

The fish observed by Carbonnier 


was erroneously named and was an 
Umbrid, the Umbra pygmaea or Mud- 
fish of New York. 


——— The work of Pterophryne and 
the flying-fishes. 

s.), xxv, No. 628, 
1907, p. 63. 

nest attributed in 
Antennarid fish by lL. 
Agassiz was really the result of a 
flying-fish’s oviposition. The Pter- 
ophryne oviposits and makes a raft 
like the Angler (Lophius piscatoris). 


Neience (n. 
hhc bam ba ie 

The so-called 
1871 to the 


Note on the genus WKublia. 


Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 
Apr., 1907, p: 150. 

In contradiction of Tl. W. Fow- 

ler, it is claimed that the name 


Dules should be reserved for D. 
anriga and the second section should 
retain the name Wuhtia, given in 
1861. 


— [Parental care exercised by the 


Osteoglossoid fish NScleropages  for- 


MLOSUS, | 

s.), xxv, No. 648, 
1907, p. 863. 
Fuhrmann’s) observa- 


Neience (n. 

May 31, 

A note on 
tion. 


—_—__—- The relation- 


ship and. habits. 


lumpsucker, its 


Ninithsonian Mise. Colls., t, 
Quar. issue, Pt. 2, No. 1729, 
July 10, 1907, pp. 175-194, 
figs. 32-47. 
An necount of 
lumpus is given. 
The chief characteristics are noted 
of the family Cyclopterids, the 
genera indicated and figured, the 
characters and popular names_ re- 
corded. The general habits, the ovi- 
position and care of young by male 
parent, and the growth of young are 
detailed. Different views as to its 
economical value are compared. 


the Cyclopterus 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


tink, Turopore. Holothurian names. 
Science (n. s.), XXviI, No. 658, 


Aug. 9, 1907, pp. 185, 186. 

Apropos of The Holothurians of 
the Hawaiian Islands, by Walter Ix. 
Fisher, it is shown that the first in- 
clusion of holothurians, so called, 
in the genus Holothuria was pub- 
lished in the twelfth edition of the 
Systema Naturae. In the tenth edi- 
tion only the Portuguese man-of- 


war and three species of Ascidians | 


were included. The name Holothuria 
should be confined to the first and 
replace Physalia, while for the typ- 
ical holothurians should be revived 
the name Bohadschia of Jiiger and 
Bohadschiidae should be used as the 
family name. 


Diemyctylus or Notophthalmus 
as names of a salamander. 


Science (n. s.), xxvi, No. 660, 
Aug. 23, 1907, p. 256. 


In his Herpetology of Japan and 
adjacent territory Dr. L. Stejneger 
adopted the name Diemyctylus and 
was unable to give the etymology. 
It is demonstrated that Notoph- 
thalmus should be used instead of 
Diemyctylus and the etymologies of 
the two names are given. 


—— Stone-gathering fishes. 

Am, Naturalist, xu1, No. 
July, 1907, pp. 468, 469. 
An article on ‘‘ Chubs’ nests,’’ by 
A. W. G. Wilson, is referred to 
and the evidence as to the species 
(Semotilus or NS. atro- 
maculatus) claimed to make _ the 

nests compared. : 


487, 


corporalis 


The Coracinus of Josephus. 
Palestine Bapl. Fund, Quart. 
Statement, Oct., 1907, p. 517. 
The Coracinus identified with 
a Tilapia. 


is 


Systematic Zoology : 

ress and purpose. 

Science (n. s.), Xxvi, No. 668, 
Oct. 18, 1907, pp. 489-505. 


Its prog- 


—  —The Millers-thumb and its 
habits. 
Smithsonian Mise. Colls., Lit, 
Quar. issue, Pt. 1, No. 1801, 
June 18, 1908, pp. 101-115, 
figs. 26-39. 

An aecount of the Cottus gobia 
and related species is given with 
relation to (1) its systematic posi- 
tion, (2) the characteristics of the 


subfamily Cottinae and genus Cottus, 
the popular names, (3) specific and 


sexual distinctions, (4-5) habits in 
general, (6) sexual relations and 


121 


| Ginn, THEOpORE—Continued. 
propagation, (7) embryology and 
growth, and (8S) uses and injuries. 
An appendix gives results of exam- 
ination of 50 specimens with refer- 
ence to numbers of rays. It is 
shown that there is variation in 
the number of ventral rays (3 or 4) 
and that the Pegedictis 
(Rafinesque) was not a Cottus, but 
Etheoctoma flabellare. 


ictalops 


| Herre, ALBERT CHRISTIAN. (See under 


| David Starr Jordan.) 


JORDAN, DAvip STARR, and DICKERSON, 
Mary Cynruia. Notes on a collec 
tion of fishes from the Gulf of Mex- 

| ico, at Vera Cruz and Tampico. 

Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXXIV, 
No. 1592, Apr. 6, 1908, pp. 
11—22) fies:-1). 2; 


Bairdiella verae-crucis is deseribed 


| as new. 

—_— —— Description of a new 
species of halfbeak, Hemiramphus 
mioprorus, from Nagasaki, Japan. 

Proc. U. 8S. Nat. Mus., -XXXIv, 
No. 1602, Apr. 25, 1908, pp. 
111-112, one fig. 


and Herre, ALBERT CHRISTIAN. 

A review of the Cirrhitoid fishes of 

Japan. 

Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXXIIl, 
No. 1562, Oct.” 23, 1907, pp. 
157-160. figs: 1 2: 

new Tsobuna, de- 


One is 


scribed. 


genus, 


—and RICHARDSON, ROBERT EARL. 
On a collection of fishes from Ech- 
igo, Japan. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XXXIIlI, 
No. 1570, Dec. 12, 1907, pp. 
263-266, figs. 1-3. 
Three new species, Lefua  echi- 
gonia, Pallasina eryngia, and Chloéa 
nakamurae are described. 


Description of a 


species of killifish, Lucania browni, 


hew 


from a hot spring in Lower Cali- 
fornia. 
Proc. U. 8S. Nat. Mus., XXXIII, 
No. 1572, Dec. 24, 1907, pp. 
319-321, 1 fig. 

— A review of the flat- 
heads, gurnards, and other mail- 
cheeked fishes of the waters of 
Japan. 

Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXXIItT, 
No. 1581, Feb. 28, 1908, pp. 


629-670, figs. 1--9. 


129 


a ed 
JORDAN, DAvip STARR, aNd RICHARDSON, 
Roperr Mart—Continued. 

Thirteen genera and 24 species are 
listed, of which the following are de- 
scribed as new: Genera, 
Bambradon, Dactyloptena, Daicocus ; 
species, Hoplichthys gilberti. 


——and SEALE, ALVIN. List of fishes 
collected in the river at Buytenzorg, 


Java, by Dr. Douglas Houghton 
Campbell. 

Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XxXxill, 

No. 1575, Dec. 24, 1907, pp. | 


635-543, figs: 1, 2: 
Twenty-four species are listed, one 
of which, Glossogobius campbell- 

ianus, is described as new. 


IKENDALL, WILLIAM CONVERSE. 
tity of a supposed whitefish, Core- 
gonus angusticeps, Cuvier and Valen- 

with a northern cyprinid, 

Platygobio gracilis (Richardson ). 


ciennes, 


Rogadius, | 


Iden- | 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


I°LETCHER. 
Eigenmann. ) 


OGLE, (See under C. H. 


SEALE, ALVIN and BEAN, BarRTon A. 
On a collection of fishes from the 
Philippine Islands, made by Maj. 
Edgar A. Mearns, surgeon, U. S. 


Army, with description of seven new 
species. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., xesx1rt, 
No. 1568, Nov. 21, 1907, pp. 
229-248, figs. 1-8. 
In this paper 132 species of fishes 
collected by Doctor Mearns at Zam- 


boanga and vicinity are listed. The 
following are described as new: 


Barbus quinquemaculatus, Mearnsella 
clestes, Rasbora punctulatus, Poly- 
dactylus opercularis, Cephalopholis 
mraeulatus, Charops zamboangae, and 
Callyodon latifasciatus. 

SNYDER, JOHN OTTERBEIN. Description 
of DPantosteus santa-anae, a new 
species from the Santa Ana River, 
Cal. 


Smithsonian Mise. Colls., Lit, | Proc. U. 8S. Nat. Mus., caer: 
Quar. issue, pt. 1, No. 1800, | No, 1595, Apr. 6, 1908, pp. 
9° ») 
May 27, 1908, pp. 95-99. 33, 34. 
MOLLUSKS. 
BartTscH, PAuL. New marine mollusks | BartscH, Patt. A new fresh-water 
from the west coast of America. bivalve (Corneocyclas) from the 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., xxxttt, mountains of Ecuador. 
No. 1564, Oct. 23, 1907, Proc. U. Ss Nat. Musa s=xth 
pp. 177-183. No. 1584, Feb. 29, 1907, 

This paper embraces diagnoses of pp. 681, 682, figs. 1, 2. 
new mollusks from the Oregonian Corneocyclas davisi. 
scion EGR PDE ke ane genera | _______Notes on the fresh-water mol- 
Neila, Bittium, Cerithiopsis, and A Age 

ey lusk VPlanorbis magnificus and de- 
Metaria. 

The following new. species and scriptions of two new forms of the 
subspecies are described : Seila mon- same genus from the southern States. 
tcrevensis, Bittium (Stylidium)  es- Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XXXIt, 
chrichti montereyensis, B. (SNS) es- No. 1587, Mar. 4, 1908, pp. 
chrichti icelum, B. csuriens multi- 


filosum, B. tumidum, B. quadrifilatum 
ingens, Cerithiopsis cosmia, C. pe- 
droana, Metaria diadema. 


——-— The west American mollusks of 
tue genus Triphoris. 

Proc. U, 8S. Nat. Mus., 

No. 1569, Dec. 12, 

pp. 249-262, one plate. 

A monograph of the west Ameri- 

can members of the genus: Tripho- 

ris montereyensis, T. pedroanus, 7’. 

T. carpenteri, T. hemp- 

hilli, 7. catalinensis, T. stearnsi, T. 

peninsularis, TT. exrcolpus, T. pana 

mensis, T. dalli, T. galapagensis, T 
chauthamensis, T'. adamsi. 


XXXKITI, 
1907, 


callipyrgus, 


697-700, one plate. 
Planorbis eucosmius, P. eucosmius 
vaughani. 


——— (See also under W. H. Dall.) 

Trane, WILLIAM IIeALey. Descriptions 
of new species of shells, chiefiy Buc- 
cinidae, from the dredgings of the 
U. S. S. Albatross during 1906, in 


the northwestern Pacific, Bering, 
Okhotsk, and Japanese seas. 

Smithsonian Mise. Colls., 1, 

Quar.. issue, Pt. 2, No. 1727, 


July 9, 1907, pp. 1389-173. 
The following species were de- 
scribed as new, the types being in 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 1S 


DALL, WILLIAM HrALEy—Continued. Dat, WILLIAM HEALEY—Continued. 


the National Museum: Pleuroto- 
mella simplicissima; Buccinum ze- 
lotes, B. opisoplectum, B. niponense, 
B. cnismatum, B. diplodetum, B. 
epistomium, B. sigmatopleura, B. 
polium, B. edematum, B. acutispir- 
atum, B. surugonum, B. kadiakense, 
B. aniwanum, B. sakhalinense, B. 
ectomocyma, B. bombycinum,  B. 
limnoideum, B. simulatum, B. buli- 
muloideum, B. rossicum, B. pemphi- 
gus, B. orotundum, B. fucanum, and 
B. eugrammatum; Chrysodomus in- 
sularis var. constrictus, C. varici- 
ferus, C. parallelus, C. adelphicus, C. 
oncodes, C. eulimatus, CC. trochoid- 


eus, G. (Ancistrolepis) damon, 
C. (A) grammatus; Tritonofusus 
calamaus,. T. esychus, TT.  (Plici- 
fusus) polypleuratus, A (PY 
elwodes, T. (P) rhyssus, T. (P) 
aurantius, T. (P) croceus, T. (P) 
kroyeri, var.; Mohnia miera, IM. 


sordida, M. clarki; Volutopsius mid- 
dendorffii var. emphaticus, V. 
nicotti var. incisus, V. limatus, V. 
simpler, V. harpa var. derius; Lio- 


mesus bistriatus; Boreotrophon ele- 
gantulus; Metula elongata; Galeo- 
dea leucodoma; Astraea persica; 


Basilissa babelica; Microgaza_ ful- 
gens; Cocculina japonica; Dental- 
ium crocinum; Nucula mirifica; Pee- 
ten (Chlamys) erythrocomatus ; Cre- 
nella grisea; OC. diaphana; Modiol- 
aria impressa; Liocyma aniwana; 
Pholadomya pacifica. 

Certain new terms for indicating 
in a diagnosis the direction of 
sculpture, are also proposed, p. 141. 


Linnaeus as a zoologist. 
Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci., 1x, July 
31,1907, pp. 272-274. 
An address before the commemo- 
rative meeting of the academy in 


honor of the bicentennial of Lin- 
naeus. 
—— On the synonymic history of 


the genera, Clava Martyn, and Ceri- 
thium Bruguiére. 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 
Sept., 1907, pp. 363-369. 

A discussion of the history of 
these generic names with the correc- 
tion of a number of published er- 
rors. 

Supplementary notes on Mar- 

tyn’s Universal Conchologist. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., 
No. 1565, Oct. 23, 

185-192, one fig. 

These notes give an account of the 
names proposed by Martyn in his 


EKKITI, 
1907, pp. 


ken- 


—— Memoranda 


third and fourth volumes, from a 
copy in the library of the Austra- 
lian Museum at Sydney, and finally 


prove that the four parts of the 
work were issued in 1784, 1784, 
1786, and 1787. It is also shown 


that the text of Chenu’s so-called 
reprint is innaccurate and not to be 
relied upon. 
On a Cymatium 
Californian fauna. 
Nautilus, xx1, No. 8, Dec., 1907, 
pp. 85, 86. 

Describes a specimen of a new 
variety, tremperi, of Cymatium cor- 
rugatun Lamarck, collected by Dr. 
R. H. Tremper near San Pedro, Cal., 
the species being previously known 
only as a member of the Mediterra- 
nean fauna. 


new to the 


Notes. 

Nautilus, xxt, No. 8, Dec., 1907, 

pp. 90, 91. 
These notes relate 
magnificus Pilsbry, which is blind 
when adult; to a reversed IMargi- 
nella apicina in the National Mu- 
seum; and to discovery of Jlyanassa 
obsoleta Say, alive on oyster beds 
on the shores of San Francisco Bay, 
where Ostrea virginica had been 
“planted,” doubtless imported from 

the East with ‘* seed’ oysters. 


to Planorbis 


of suggestions for 
the organization of an American 
Conchological «xssociation or society. 
Nautilus, Xx1, No. 8, Dee., 1907, 

pp. 94-96. 

This is practically the report of a 
committee to consider the formation 
of such a society, appointed at the 
International Zoological -Congress of 
1907, by those members interested 
in the subject. 

Note on Gonidea angulata Lea, 

a fresh-water bivalve, with descrip- 
tion of a new variety. 

Smithsonian Mise. 

Quar. issue, Pt. 

Jan. 28, 1908, pp. 499, 500. 

Describes the variety haroldiana 

Dall, from Santa Clara County, Cal. 


Colls., UL 
4, No. 1784, 


% 


Anew species of Cavolina, with 
notes on other Pteropoda. 

Smithsonian Mise. Colls., L, 
Quar. issue, Pt. 4, No. 1785, 

Jan. 28, 1908, pp. 501, 502. 
Cavolina couthouyi Dall, from the 
South Pacific is described; the new 
name Clio antarctica is proposed for 
the preoccupied C. australis D’Or- 
bigny, and notes are given on a num- 

ber of other Pacific Pteropods. 


124 


DALL, WILLIAM HEALEY. Subdivisions 


of the Terebridae. 
Nautilus, xxi, No. 11, 
1908, pp. 124, 125. 

A revision of the group based on 
the museum collection. The follow- 
ing new subdivisions are proposed: 
Perirhoé for Terebra circumcineta 
Deshayes; T'riplostephanus for Tere- 
bra triseriata Gray; Acuminia for 
Terebra  lanceata Linnaeus; and 
Duplicaria for forms like Terebra 
duplicata Wamarck. A new tech- 
nical term, ‘‘ pervious,’’ is proposed 
for the condition when the axis of 
a spiral gastropod is coiled about 
a central vacant space without sepa- 
rating it from the cavity of the 
whorls, in contradistinetion to 
‘‘ perforate,’ which indicates an 
axial umbilicus completely separated 
from the cavity of the whorls. 


Mar.. 


Note on Turbonilla castanea 
and Odostomia montereyensis. 


Nautilus, xxtI, No. 11, Mar., 


1908, p. 131. 
These names, given by Dall and 
Bartsch in a recent paper (Vroce. 


U. §S. Nat. Mus., No. 1574), having 
proved to be preoccupied, the names 
T. (P.) castanella and O. (A.) can- 
jieldi are proposed as substitutes. 


Some new Californian shells. 


Nautilus, xxi, No. 12, Apr., 
1908, pp. 156, 137. 

Rissoa (Alvania) grippiana and 

Bela grippi are described as new 


from specimens in the U. 8. National 
Museum. 


— A 
acidae. 


revision of the Solenomy- 


Nautilus, xXxtI, No. 1, 
1908; pp. 1, 2. 

A revision of the group showing 
that it comprises several  subdivi- 
sions, namely, subgenus WNSolenya 
Lamarck, with three new 
subgenus Petrasma Dall, with three 
sections ; and new subgenus Acharar 


May, 


sections ; 


Dall, with one seetion. The = speci- 
mens studied are in the National 
Museum. 


——— Doctor Montgomery’s proposed 
amendment to the rules of nomen- 
clature. 

Science (n. s.), XXviI, No. 656, 
July, 26, 1907, p. 117. 

——— The Antarctic expedition of the 
Discovery under Capt. Seott, R. N., 
1901-1904. 

Science (n. s.), XxXviI, No. 661, 
Aug. 30, 1907, pp. 283-285. 
Review of Vols. If and III, on 
Zoology and Botany. 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


DALL, WILLIAM HerALEY. Resultats du 
Voyage du 8S. Y. Belgica, en 1897— 
1899, sous le commandement de <A, 
de Gerlache de Gomery: Zoologie. 


Science (n. s.), xxvi, No. 672, 
Noy. 15, 1907, pp. 660, 661. 
Review of reports on the zoology 
of the Belgian antarctic expedition. 
For the preoccupied medusa-name 
Isonema, the new name <Arctapo- 
dema is proposed by the reviewer. 


——— National Antarctic Expedition, 


1901-1904, S. 8S. Discovery, com- 
manded by Captain Scott, R. N.,, 
Natural History, Vol. 1, Geology. 
Science (n. s.), xxviI, No. 672, 
Nov. 15, 1907, pp. 661, 662. 
A review of the geological results 
of the expedition. 


notes on 


nomenclature. 
Science (n. 
May 22, 


Some malacological 


S.), XxXxvVII, No. 699, 
1908, pp. 827, 828. 


A discussion of some nomencla- 
torial questions raised by Dr. H. 
von Ihering. 


——— Descriptions of new species of 


mollusks from the Pacific coast of 
the United States, with notes on 
other mollusks from the same region. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat. Muss, SXxiv; 
No. 1610, June 16, 1908, pp. 

245-257. 

The following new forms are de- 
scribed: Clistaris polystrigma, Tur- 
ris (Antiplanes) diaular, T. (Sur- 
cula) haleyonis, Acanthina — lapil- 
loides variety aurantia, Tritonofusus 
(Plicifusus)  kelseyi, Boreotrophon 
bentleyi, Anachis petravis, Opalia 
(Dentiscala) mazatlanica, O. (D.) 
mexicana, Epitonium (Crisposcala) 
acrostephanus, HE. (C.)  ecatalinae, 
?BHulima lomana, Odostomia (Hvalea) 
atossa, Trichotropis? kelseyi, Phasi- 
anella compta variety producta, Fis- 
surella voleano variety  ecrucifera, 
Yoldia ensifera variety plena, 

The following new names are sub- 
stitutes for names which are found 


to be -preoccupied: for Pleurotoma 
inermis Tinds, the specific name 
Ophioderma; for P. cancellata Car- 


penter, the name rhines; for Colum- 


bella (Anachis) minima Arnold, the 
name arnoldi; for Hulithidium va- 


riegatum Carpenter, the name 
typicum,; for Phasianella punetata 
Carpenter, the name carpenteri. 


The material upon which this 
paper is based is in the National 
Museum. 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


DALL, WILLIAM HEALEY, and BarrscuH, 
Paut. The Pyramidellid mollusks 


of the Oregonian faunal area. 

Proc. U.S, Nat Mus., SXXIri, 
No. 1574, Dee. 31, 1907, pp. 

491-534, pls. XLIV-XLVIII. 
This is a general revision of the 
local group from material chiefly in 
the National Museum. The follow- 
ing new species are described and 
figured : Turbonilla (Turbonilla) 
gilli and subspecies delmontensis, 
(T. Chemnitzia?) montereyensis, T. 
(C.)  muricatoides, T.  (Striotur- 
bonilla) serrac, TT. (Pyrgolampros) 


125 


DaLL, WILLIAM HEALEY, and BarTscH, 
Paut—Continued. 


(C.) oregonensis, O. (Ividia) navisa, 


O. (1.)  navisa  delmontensis, O. 
(Jolaea) amianta, O. (Menestho) 
pharcida, O. (M.) harfordensis, O. 


(M.) erara, O. 
sis, O. (£.) angularis, O. 
etti, O. (H.) columbiana, 
deliciosa, O. (E.) tacomaensis, O. 
(#.) vaidezi, O. (H.) phanea, O. 
(Amaura) kennerleyi, O. (A.) mon- 
tereyensis (previously used and later 
replaced by O. (A.) canfieldi. 


(Pvalea) tillamooken- 
(E.) jew- 
O. CE.) 


taylor, TT. (P.) berryt, T. (P-) The following previously described 
ali, T. (P.) victoriana, T: '(P.) but unfigured species are figured: 
valdezi, T. (P.) newcombet, T. (P.) Turbonilla vancouverensis Baird, T. 
oregonensis, T. (Pyrgiseus) canfieldi, Stylina Carpenter, J. lordi EB. A. 
T. (P.) morchi, T. (P.) antestriata, Smith, 7. tridentata Carpenter, 7. 
T. (P.) eucosmobasis, T. (P.) cas- tenuicula Gould, TT. aurantia Car- 
tanea (preoccupied name, later penter; Odostomia tenuisculpta Car- 
changed to T. castanella), T. (Mor- penter, O. inflata Carpenter, O. avel- 
mula) eschscholtai ; Odostomia lana Carpenter, O. nuciformis Car- 
(Chrysallida) cooperi, O. (C.) as- penter, O. gouldii, O. satura Car- 
tricta, O. (C.) montereyensis, O. penter. 
INSECTS. 
SARBER, H. S. Notes on Omomyia hir- | BuscK, AuvGcust. New microlepidop- 
suta Coquillett. tera from Pennsylvania. 
Proc. Ent. Soc. Wash., 1x, Apr., Can. Ent., xt, No. 6, June, 


1908, pp. 28, 29. 


The glow-worm <Astraptor. 
Proc. Ent. Soc. Wash., 1x, Apr., 
1908, pp. 41-43, pl. 1. 


Busck, August. New genera and spe- 
cies of American microlepidoptera. 
Journ. N. Y. Ent. Soc., xv, No. 
3, Sept., 1907, pp. 184-140. 
Two new genera and nine new 
species from the United States are 
described. 
Descriptions of three new 'Tor- 
tricidae from Mexico. 
Journ. N. Y. Ent. Soc., xv, No. 
4, Dec., 1907, pp. 285, 236. 
Descriptions of North American 
Tineina. 
Proc. Ent. Soe. Wash., xX, Apr., 
1908, pp. 85-95. 
Sixteen new species. 
Report on a trip for the purpose 
of studying the mosquito fauna of 
-anama, 
Smithsonian Mise. Colls., wit, 
Quar. issue, No. 1795, May 1, 
1908, pp. 49-77. 
Notes on the habits of the various 
species taken, 


1908, pp. 193-196. 

Seven new species are described. 
CAUDELL, A. N. Kirby’s catalogue of 
Orthoptera. 

Can. Ent., XXXIx, No. 8, Aug., 

1907, pp. 287-292. 
Additions and corrections. 


An insect ventriloquist. 


Ent. News, xviii, No. 8, Oct., 
L907,. pp, 385; 336: 


On the song of Cyphoderris piperi. 


of the 
United States and the Indies. 
Journ, N. Y. Ent. xv, No. 
3, Sept., 1907, pp. 166-170. 
Description of two new species 
and notes on a number of described 
forms. 


some Forficulidae 
West 


eines 
BOG; 


— On 


—— Notes on United States Orthop- 
tera, with the description of one new 


species. 


Proc. Ent. Soc. Wash., vVitt, 
Nos. 3, 4, 1907, pp. 133-135. 
A number of new records in 


Orthoptera. 


126 


CAUDELL, A. N. On some carwigs 
(Forficulidae) collected in Guate- 


mala by Messrs. Schwarz and Bar- 

ber. 
Prod. U0; 
No. 1563, 
169-176. 
A number of new species and a 

new genus are described. 

———A 


Zona, 


Nat. 
Oct. 


Mus., XXXIII, 
1907, pp. 


Oo 
2a, 


new Barytettix from  Ari- 


Proc. Ent. Soc. Wash., 1x, Apr., 


1908, pp. 69-71. 
Barytettir borealis described. 
——— Notes on some western Or- 
thoptera; with the description of 
one new species. 
Proc. U. SS. Nat. dis... SEE, 
No. 1599, Apr. 17, 1908, pp. 
71-81. 
Report on a collection of Or- 
thoptera made on the Pacific coast. 
CoquiLLeTT, D. W. Notes and de- 
seriptions of Hippoboscidae and 
Streblidae. 
Ent. News, xvi1t, No. 7, July, 


1907, pp. 290-292, one fig. 
Describes one new genus and two 
new species, with notes on four ad- 
ditional species. 


New and of 


Diptera. 


generé species 


Proc. Ent. Soc. Wash., tx, Apr., | 


1908, pp. 144-148. 


Describes three new genera and 
nine new species. 
CRAWFORD, J. C. New North Ameri- 


‘an. Hymenoptera. 
Journ. N. Y. Ent. Soc., xv, No. 
4, Dec., 1907, pp. 177-183. 


live new genera and nine new 
species, mostly parasitic, are de- 
seribed. 


——— Notes on some species of the 
genus Halictus. 
Journ. N. Y. Ent. Soc., xv, No. 
4, Dec., 1907, pp. 183-189. 
Tables of the black species with 
the description of one new 
in the National Museum. 


——— A new 
Eupelminae. 
Proc. Ent. Soc. Wash., 1X, Apr., 
INOS, pp. 156, 157. 
One new 
from 
seribed, 


species 


genus and species of 


genus and one 
the West Indies 


new 
are 


spe- 


de- 


cies 


——— Some new Chalcidoidea. 
Proc. Ent. Soc. Wash., 1X, Apr., 
1908, pp. 157-160. 
One new genus and six new spe- 
cies are described. 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


Dyar, Hl. G. The life histories of the 
New York slug-caterpillars, x1rx. 
Journ. N. Y. Ent. Soc., xv, No. 4, 
Dec., 1907, pp. 219—226, pl. 11. 
One species. 


New American Lepidoptera. 
Journ. N.Y. Ent. Soc., xv, No. 4, 
Dec., 1907, pp. 226-234. 
One new genus and 18 new species 
are described, and notes given on 
other species. 


The identity of Brephos califor- 
nicus and BG. melanis. 


Can. Hnt., X=xIx, Nox 122) Decr 
1907, p. 411, 


——— Descriptions of some new spe- 
of American Noctuidae. 
Can. Ent., xu, No. 3, Mar., 1908, 
pp. 77-80. 


cies 


—__—— The 
spila. 


geometrid genus Racheo- 


Can. Ent., xu, No. 5, May, 1908, 
De LE 


Life histories of North Amer- 

ican Geometridae, LXVIIL. 

Psyche, x1v, No. 5, Oct., 1907, 
pp. 92-94. 


——— Notes on some species of Noto- 
dontidae in the collection of the U.S. 
National Museum, with descriptions 
of new genera and species. 

Proc. Ent. Soc. Wash., 1x, Apr., 
1908, pp. 45-69. 
Five new genera and 82 new spe- 
cies are described. 


A pyralid inhabiting the fur of 
the living sloth. 
Proc. Ent. Soc. Wash., 1x, Apr., 
1908, pp. 142-144, fig. 9. 
One new genus, one new species. 


———and Knap, F. Descriptions of 
three new North American mosqui- 
toes. 

Journ. N.Y. Ent. Soc., Xv, No. 4, 


Dec., 1907, pp. 213, 214. 


— Descriptions of new mos- 
quitoes from the Canal Zone. 

Journ. N. Y. Ent. Soc., xv, No. 
4, Dec., 1907, pp. 197-212. 


Describes 31 new species. 


IHkIDEMANN, Orro. Notes on Heide- 
mannia cixiformis Uhler and other 
species of Isometopinae. 

Proc. Ent. Soc. Wash., Ix, Apr., 
1908, pp. 126-130, fig. T. 
Describes 3 new species. 


REPORT 


Howarp, L. O. New genera and spe- 


cies of Apelininae, with a _ revised 
table of the genera. 
U. S. Dept. Agr., Bur. EHnt., 


Technical Series, No. 12, Pt. 
4, July 12, 1907, pp. 69-88, 
figs. 13-22. 
Descriptions of 5 new genera and 
20 new species. 


A chalcidid parasite of the tick. 


Ent. News, xvii, No. 9, Nov., 
1907, pp. 875-378, pl. xiv, 

1 fig. 
Description of Jxodiphagus, new 


genus, teranus, new species, and an 
account of the evidence connected 
with the rearing of this form from 
Haemaphysalis leporis-palustris on 
rabbits in Texas. 


A suggestion regarding develop- 
ment retarded by parasitism. 


Can. Ent., xt, No. 1, Jan., 1908, 
pp. 34, 35. 


KNAB, FREDERICK. Mosquitoes as flow- 


er visitors. 
Journ. N. Y. Ent. Soc., xv, No. 
4, Dec., 1907, pp. 215-219. 
A summary of all records of mos- 
quitoes as flower visitors. 


OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


127 


KNAB, FREDERICK. Culicid characters. 
Can. Ent., xxx1x, No. 10, Oct., 
1907, pp. 349-353. 
Discussion of the characters used 
in classification. 


varieties of Locustidae. 
Science (n. s.), xxvi1, No. 670, 
Nov., 1907, pp. 595-597. 
Treats of red varieties of green 
forms. 


—— Color 


Observations on the mosquitoes 
of Saskatchewan. 
Smithsonian Misc. Colls.,  , 
Quar. issue, pt. 4, No. 1787, 
Feb. 20, 1908, pp. 540-547. 
Notes on the species taken by the 
author. 


A new genus and species of 


sabethid mosquito. 


Journ. N. Y. 
3, Sept., 1907, pp. 


Ent. Soc., xv, No. 
120; 121; 


——— Deinocerites again. 


Journ. N. Y. Ent. Soc., xv, No. 
3, Sept., 1907, pp. 121-123. 


(See also under H. G. Dyar.) 


CRUSTACEANS. 


ANDREWS, E. A. The young of the 
crayfishes Astacus and Cambarus. 
Smithsonian Contributions — to 
Knowledge, part of Vol. Xxxv, 
No. 1718, Oct. 3, 1907, pp. 
1-79, pls. I-x. 

Describes the young of Astacus 
leniusculus from Oregon and Cam- 
barus affinis from Maryland. Deter- 
mines the form and habits of the 
first, second, and third larval stages ; 
gives the first detailed account of 
the appendages of the first and sec- 
ond stages; describes the hitherto 
unknown nature of successive me- 
chanical attachments of the off- 
spring to the parent. 


BRADLEY, J. CHESTER. Notes on two 
amphipods of the genus Corophium 


from the Pacific coast. 
Univ. Cal. Pub. Zool., 1v, No. 4, 


May 15, 1908, pp. 227-252, 
pls. 9-13. 
Describes and figures in detail 


Corophium spinicorne and C.. sal- 
monis Stimpson, both of which were 
before incompletely defined, and 
shows their relationships by a key 
to all the svecies cf the genus. 
About 600 specimens of C. salmonis 


82065—09 9 


BRADLEY, J. CHESTER—Continued. 
were examined from the stomachs of 
young salmon from Karluk, Alaska, 
collected by the U. S. Bureau of 
Fisheries. ‘ 


CUSHMAN, JOSEPH A. Fresh-water 
crustacea from Labrador and New- 


foundland. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., Xxxitl, 
No. 1589, Mar. 4, 1908, pp. 
705-713, pls. LVI1I—-LXII. 
The material upon which the paper 
is based was collected near the east- 


ern coast of Labrador (Dr. Glover 
M. Allen, collector) and at Funk 
Island, Newfoundland (Mr. Owen 


Bryant, collector), It comprises one 
species of Ostracoda, which is new, 
seven species of Cladocera, and one 
of Copepoda. The author points out 
the similarity between this fauna 
and that of northern Europe. 


ORTMANN, ARNOLD E. Schizopod crus- 
taceans in the U. SS. National 
Museum: Schizopods from Alaska. 


Proc. U. &. Nat. Mus., xxxiv, 
No. 1591, Apr. 6, 1908, pp. 
1-10, 1 plate. 


1 


ORTMANN, ARNOLD E. 


P 


P 


28 


Continued, 
Treats of the Schizopods collected 
during the Alaska salmon investiga- 
tions by the Bureau of Fisheries in 
1908. three species, two 
of which are new, one representing a 
new genus. /Tolmesiella, to include 
which the definition of the sub- 
family Leptomysinae is altered. 


Describes 


EARSE, ARTHUR S. Descriptions 


four new species of amphipodous 
crustacea from the Gulf of Mexico, 
Proc: U. SS. Nat. Mus.) XXX1y, 
No. 1594. Apr. 6, 1908, pp. 

27-32, figs. 1-4. 
tepresents a partial study of the 
National Museum colleetion of 


Amphipods from the Gulf of Mexico. 
The types of two of the species were 


dredged by the U. S.. Fisheries 
steamer Fish Hawk, another was 
taken at Cameron, La., under the 
auspices of the Gulf Biologic Sta- 
tion, while the fourth is from 
Oyster Bay, Fla., collected by Henry 
ITemphill. 


THienry A. The Barnacles 
(Cirripedia) con- | tained in the col- 
lections of | the U. SS. National 
Museum | by | Henry :A. Pilsbry | Spe- 


ILSBRY, 


of | 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


| Rarnpun, Mary J.—Continued. 


{ 


cial Curator of the Department of | 


Mollusca, Academy 

of 

Washington | Government 
Office | 1907. 

Bull, U. S. Nat. Mus., 

Noy. 8, 1907, pp. i-x, 

pls. I-x1, figs. 1-36. 

Deals with the peduneculate cirri- 

pedes and the sessile family Ver- 

rucide, All represented in 

the National Museum are mentioned 

or described, and all known species 

of the United States and adjacent 

waters are treated monographically 

and included in the keys to species. 

Of the Pedunculata 

National 

new), 10 subspecies 

tained in 11 

sections or 

2 subfamilies of the Lepadidae. 


| of Natural Sci- 
ences Philadelphia | [Seal] | 
Printing 
No. 60, 
1-122, 


species 


Museum 73 
(all 
genera (1 
subvenera 


species (37 
new), con- 
new), 11 


of 


there are in the | 


(3 new), and 


the Verrucidae there are 5 species (4 | 


new) and one new subspecies, all be- 
longing to the genus Verruca. 


RATHBUN, Mary J. Reports on the 
scientific results of the expedition to 
the tropical Pacific, in charge of 


Alexander Agassiz, by the U. S. Fish 
Commission steamer Albatross, from 
August, 1899, to Mareh, 1900, Com- 
mander Jefferson TF. U.S: 
Navy, conpnnanding. 


Moser, 


IX. 


It IGHARDSON, 


Reports on the scientific results of 
the expedition to the eastern trop- 
ical Pacific, in charge of Alexander 
Agassiz, by the U. S. Fish Commis- 
sion steamer Albatross, from Octo- 
ber, 1904, to March, 1905, Lieutenant- 


Commander lL. M. Garrett, U. S. 
Navy, commanding. X. 
The Brachyura. 
Memoirs Mus. Comp. Zool, 
xxxv, No. 2, Aug:., 1907, pp: 


21-74, pls. 1-9. 
One hundred and thirty-six species 
are recorded, 18 of which are new, 
one representing a new genus. 


—— South American crustacea. 


Revista Chilena de Historia 
Natural, Santiago de Chile, 
aflo x1, Nim. 1, February 28, 
1907, pp. 45-50, pls. II, 11%, 

text fig. 1. 
A list of seven species of stalk-eyed 
crustacea, specimens of which were 
sent by Prof. Charles I. Porter to 


the United States National Museum 
for determination. A new _ crab, 
Pinniva valdiviensis, and a new 
shrimp, Mippolysmata porteri, are 
described, while a new name, Gala 
inea lenzi, is given to Galathea 
lautivostris Lenz, not Dana. The 


types were destroyed by the earth 


quake at Valparaiso, but cotypes 
are in the United States National 
Museum, 


(See also under William Stimp- 
son. ) 
HARRIET. Terrestrial 


isopods of the family Eubelidae, col- 
lected in Liberia by Dr. O. F. Cook. 


Smithsonian Misc. Colls., 1, 
Quar. issue, Pt. 2, No. 1733, 
Sept. 12, 1907, pp. 219-247, 


figs. 50-116. 

The specimens were collected un- 
der the auspices of the New York 
State Colonization Society by Dr. 
O. F. Cook and others, chiefly at 
Mount Coffee. One new genus and 
12 new species (referable to four 
genera) are described. The types be- 
long to Doctor Cook; some cotypes 
are in the U. S. National Museum. 


On some isopods of the 
Dajidae from the northwest 
Ocean, with descriptions of 
genus and two new species. 


Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., XXXIII, 
No. 1586, Feb. 29, 1908, pp. 
689-696, figs. 1-7. 


family 
Pacific 
a new 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


RIcHARDSON, Harriet—Continued. 

In this paper, despite its title, are 
described a new genus and three new 
species of Dajidae. Two of the spe- 
cies come from Bering Island, while 


the type-locality of Holophryxrus 
californiensis is in southeastern 
Alaska, a cotype from Santa Bar- 


bara Channel furnishing the specific 
name. Two of the species are para- 
sitic on Macrura, the other on a 
Schizopod. 

RICHARDSON, HARRIET. The parasitic 
isopod Leidya_ distorta (Leidy) 
found on a new host. 

Proc. U. Sz Nat: Mus., XXXIV; 
No. 1593, Apr. 6, 1908, pp. 
23-26, figs. 1-5. 

Describes specimens of Leidya dis- 
torta from Bermuda parasitic on 
Pachygrapsus transversus (Gibbes). 

—— Description of a new isopod of 
the genus Eurycope from Marthas 
Vineyard. 

Proc. U. S. Nat..-Mus., XXXIiv, 
No. 1598, Apr. 17, 1908, pp. 
67-69, figs. 1-3. 

Burycope truncata, described from 
deep water off Marthas Vineyard and 
off Georges Bank. 


StespsIne, THomas R. R. A new am- 
phipod crustacean, Orchestoidea biol- 


leyi, from Costa Rica. 

Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXxtv, 
No. 1609, May 15, 1908, pp. 
241-244, pl. xu1, figs. 1, 2. 

Based on specimens collected at 
Punta Arenas by Prof. P. Biolley. 
Discusses also the Costa Rican Hya- 
lella faroni Stebbing and its allies, 
and corrects the definition of the 
family Talitridae in ‘Das Tier- 
reich.” 


STIMPSON, WILLIAM. 
erustacea (Brachyura and  Ano- 
mura) collected by the North Pacific 
Exploring Expedition, 1853-1856. 

Smithsonian Mise. Colls., Xuix, 

No. 1717, Sept. 7, 1907, pp. 
1—240, pls. I-XXVI. 

A posthumous publication of a re- 

port prepared by Doctor Stimpson 

for the Navy Department prior to 


1871. Brief preliminary descriptions 
of all the genera and species had 
been published in the Proceedings 


of the Academy of Natural Sciences 
of Philadelphia. A few species are 
missing from the 3858 _ originally 


Report on the | 


129 


STIMPSON, WILLIAM—Continued. 
described. The introductory note 
and the explanatory footnotes are 
supplied by Miss Mary J. Rathbun. 


VERRILL, A. EK. Decapod crustacea of 
Bermuda; I. Brachyura and Ano- 
mura. Their distribution, varia- 
tions, and habits. 

Trans. Conn. Acad. Arts and 
Sciences, x111, Jan.—Apr. 1908, 
pp. 899-474, pls. IX—XXVIII. 
Reprinted as a separate, Apr., 
1908. 
Two species and 4 varieties are 
described as new. 


WILSON, CHARLES BRANCH. North 
American Parasitic Copepods belong- 
ing to the family Calfgidae. Parts 3 
and 4. <A revision of the Panda- 
rinae and the Cecropinae. 

Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXXII, 
No. 1573, Dec. 31, 1907, pp. 
323-490, pls. xVII-XLIII, figs. 
1-18. 

The sixth paper in 
based upon the parasitic copepods 
in the U. S. National Museum. It is 
a eareful revision of the two fam- 


the series 


ilies named. Twenty species are 
described, of which one is new to 
science. The males of eight other 
species are definitely located, four 
of them being new to science. The 
difficult genus Nogaus is analyzed 
and its component parts” referred 
to their proper genera. A complete 


life history is presented by using 
different stages of development from 
different genera, 


North American parasitic cope- 


pods: new genera and species of 
Caliginae. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., xxxIiIrI, 
No. 1580, Feb. 28, 1908, pp. 
593-627, pls. XLIX—LVI. 


Based on work carried on in 1905 
at the laboratory of the Bureau of 
Fisheries at Beaufort, N. C. Five 
new and two previously known spe- 
cies of Calignae are described, two 
new species forming types of new 
genera. At the end of the paper is 
given an alphabetical list of fishes of 
Beaufort which were hosts of para- 
sitic copepods, with the names of 
the latter, many of which are still 
to be described, 


120 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908, 


ECHINODERMS. 


AGASSIZ, ALEXANDER, and CLARK, 
HUBERT LYMAN. Preliminary re- 
port on the Eechini collected in 1906, 
from May to December, among the 
Aleutian Islands, in Bering Sea, and 
along the of Kamehatka, 
Saghalin, Korea, and Japan, by thes| 
U. S. Fish steamer 
Albatross, Lieut.-Commander LL. M. 
Garrett, U. S. Navy, commanding. 

Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., ut, No. 
5, Oct., 1907, pp. 109-139. 
Seventy-one are enu- 
merated, belonging to 42 genera; 20 
species are described as new. 


coast 


Commission 


species 


CLARK, AUSTIN Hoparr. Descriptions 


of new species of recent unstalked 


crinoids from the North Pacific 
Ocean. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXxX111, 
No. 1559, Sept. 17, 1907, pp. 
69-S4. 
Based on material collected by 
the United States Fisheries steamer 


Albatross in the Pacific Ocean north 
of Mexico and southern Japan. <A 
key is given to the species described 
in the paper. One new = species of 
Decametrocrinus and 20 new species 
of Antedon are described. The latter 


belong to the Hlegans, Eschrichtii, 
and Tenella groups of the genus 


Antedon, 


Descriptions of new species of 
recent unstalked crinoids from the 
coasts of northeastern Asia. 

Proc. U. 8: Nat Mus.3° XS1T, 
No. 1561, Sept. 17, 1907, pp. 
127-156. 

Here are described 30 new species 

of Antedon and three new species of 


Comatula, while new names are 
given to a $Comatula and an 
Atelecrinus. A key is given to the 
species in the paper; those of the 


genus Antedon belong to the Acela, 
Multicolor, Basicurva, Npinifera, 
Palmata, and FBlegans groups. | 


——— Five new recent crinoids from 
the North Pacific Ocean. 
Smithsonian 
Quar. 

Oct. 

1 fig. 

The new 
genera Bathycrinus 

(2), and Antedon 


Mise. be A 
pt. 3, No. 1777, 
9 


issue, N 
1907, pp. 3387-342 


Og 
mvs 


to the 
Zygometra 
They were 


species belong 
(A); 


(3). 


CLARK, AUSTIN Hospart—Continued. 
collected in southern Japan and 
Kamchatka by the United States 
Fisheries steamer Albatross in 1900. 


New of 
crinoids, 

Smithsonian Mise. Colls.,  , 
Quar. issue, pt. 3, No. 1778, 

Oct. 29, 1907, pp. 343-364. 
Divides the genus Antedon de 
Freminville, 1811, into 18 genera, 
all of which are new with the ex- 
ception of <Antedon itself. The 
known species are distributed as fol- 


genera recent free 


lows: to Zygometra 6, Nanometra 4, 
Tropiometra 4, Heliometra 19, 
Thysanometra i, Antedon 36, 


Psathyrometra Qo; 
Pontiometra $1, 
Cyllometra 7, 
metra 4, 
tometra 


Zenonelra 1: 
Hlimerometra 52, 
Perometra 2, Ptilo 
Thalassometra 23, Chari- 
19, Pacilometra 2, Calo- 


metra Adelometra 1. 


— Notice of some crinoids in the 
of the of Com- 
parative Zoology. 
Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., Li, No. 
8, Jan., 1908, pp. 233-248, 
DIS, wy 
Ten species are recorded, eight of 
which are new. Keys to the 
species of Bathycrinus and to the 
genera of the Antedonidae are given ; 


collection Museum 


also a note on the G-rayed = speci- 
mens of Tropiometra carinata 
(Lamarck), The four species de- 


seribed from specimens collected by 
the U. S. Fisheries steamer Alba- 
tross are in the collection of the 
U. S. National Museum. 


Infrabasals in recent genera of 


the crinoid family Pentacrinitidae. 


Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXXIIlI, 
No. 1582, Feb. 29, 1908, pp. 

671-676, figs. 1-8. 
Demonstrates the presence of 
infrabasals in Jsocrinus decorus, 
MVetacrinus rotundus and M. super- 

bus. 

——— The crinoid genus Comatula 


Lamarck: with a note on the En- 


crinus parrae of Guérin. 
Proc. U. 8S. Nat. 
No. 1585, Feb. 
6S3—-GS8S8. 
Divides the original genus Coma- 


Mus., XXXIII, 
29, 1908, pp. 


tula into two parts—Comatula 
Lamarck 1816 restricted (type C. 
solaris Lamarck 1816) with seven 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


CLARK, AUSTIN Hospart—Continued. 


species, and Comaster L. Agassiz 
1836 (type C. multiradiata  Lin- 
naeus 1758) with 44 species. The 


author shows that Hnerinus parrae 
of Guérin 1835 is the same as 
Pentacrinus miilleri Orsted, which 
should therefore be known as_ Iso- 
crinus parrae (Guerin). 
The stalked crinoids of the Si- 
boga Expedition. 
Amerizan Naturalist, xu, No. 
495, Mar., 1908, pp. 203-206. 
A review of a monograph by Dr. 
L. Déderlein on the recent stalked 
erinoids of the East Indies, based 
on the collections made by the * Si- 
boga’’ Expedition, and containing 
the announcement of the discovery 


of the infrabasals in a species of 
Metacrinus. 
—— New genera of unstalked cri- 
noids. 
Proc. Biol. Soe. Washington, 
xxI, Apr. 11, 1908, pp. 125-— 
136. 
Thirteen new genera cf Comatu- 
lida are described, while the new 


name Pentametrocrinidae is given to 
the family containing Pentametro- 
crinus and Decametrocrinus. The 
paper concludes with a systematic 
list of the families and genera of 
Comatulida. 
New stalked crinoids from the 
eastern coast of North America. 
Proc. iW. Si. Nak Mus... Sexy; 
No. 1607, May 4, 1908, pp. 
205-208, figs. 1-3. 
Two new species are described— 
Bathycrinus serratus and Rhizocri- 


nus verrilli—the types of which 
were collected by the U. S. Fish 
Commission and were recently re- 


turned to the U. S. National Museum 
by Prof. A. E. Verrill. 
Descriptions of new species of 
erinoids, chiefly from the collections 
made by the U. 8S. Fisheries steamer 
Albatross at the Hawaiian Islands 
in 1902; with remarks on the classi- 
fication of the Comatulida. 
Proc. U0. S.; Nat. Mis... XOCxtv, 
No. 1608, May 14, 1908, pp. 
209-239. 

Gives a key to the 11 recent fam- 
ilies of Comatulida, and their geo- 
graphical and bathymetrical range; 
also a table of distribution for the 
29 genera, and a key to the 12 Ha- 


131 


CLARK, AUSTIN Hospart—Continued. 
waliian species cf which 11 are de- 
scribed as new. Thirteen other new 


species are described from various 
parts of the Atlantic and Pacific 
oceans. 


Two new crinoid genera. 


Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, 
XxI, June 9, 1908, pp. 149- 
152. : 


Subdivides the genus Jsocrinus on 
characters of arm = structure, erect-- 
ing two new genera. Hndorocrinus, 
type H. parrae (Guérin), and Hypa- 
locrinus, type H. naresianus, P. A. 
Carpenter. 


Some abnormal 


structure in recent crinoids. 
Proc: “WT. 8S: Nat. Mus: Sexi, 
No. 1612, June 16, 1908, pp. 
265-270, figs. 1-5. 
Records instances” of 
arm structure 
tensis, 


cases of arm 


abnormal 
in Rhizocrinus lofo- 
Pecilometra acala, Himero- 
metra stylifer, Charitometra imbri- 
eata, Heliometra tanneri and 4H. 
marima,. 


The crinoid genus Eudioecrinus, 
with description of a new species. 
Proc. U. 8. Nat, Mfus.; sxx, 
No. 1613, June 20, 1908, pp. 
271-279, figs. 1-11. 

Discusses the structure of the va- 
rious species previously included in 
Eudiocrinus and demonstrates their 
position in two families, Zygomet- 
ridae and Pentametrocrinidae. The 
genera Hudiocrinus and Pentametro- 
ecrinus are defined, and a new species 
of Eudiocrinus is described. 


CLARK, HuperT LYMAN. The Cidaridae. 
Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., ut, No. 
7, Dec., 1907, pp. 165-230, 
pls. 1-11. 
Gives a history of the classifiea- 
tion of the Cidaridae. Recognizes 21 


genera and 60 recent species; two 
genera and three species are de- 


scribed as new. 


—— The Apodous Holothurians. <A 
monograph of the Synaptidae and 
Molpadiidae, including a report on 
the representatives of these families 
in the collections of the U. S. Na- 
tional Museum. 

Smithsonian Contributions to 
Knowledge, part of vol. XxxvV, 
No. 1723, Jan. 21, 1908, pp. 
1-231, pls. I-XIII. 


132 


CLARK, Husperr LyMAN—Continued. 

Discusses the history of the classi- 
ficntion of the two families involved, 
gives an annotated catalogue of the 
specimens in the U. S. National 
Museum, and describes the structure, 
physiology, development, habits, and 
classification of the two families and 
of each species of the same, so far 
as known. 


Fight new species and two new 
genera are described. 
(See also under Alexander 
Agassiz. ) 
EDWARDS, CHARLES LINCOLN. The Ho- 


lothurians of the North Pacifie coast 
of North America collected by the 
Albatross in 1905. 
G. 8S; Nat. Mus, Sx, 
1558, Sept. 14, 1907, pp. 
figs. 1-12. 

sased on Holothurians collected 
by the United States Fisheries 
steamer Albatross during the Alaska 


Proc. 
No. 
49-68, 


salmon investigations in 1903. 
Eleven species are discussed, of 
which one is a new form. 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


FISHER, WALTER KX. Necessary changes 
in the nomenclature of starfishes. 


Smithsonian Mise. Colls., wit, 
Quar. issue, Pt. 1, No. 1799, 

May 1908, pp. 87-93. 
Gives a list of names of genera 
of starfishes in current use, most of 


PA 


which should be changed. Dis- 
cusses 12 of them in detail.  Pro- 
poses four new names: Lysasterias 


for Anasterias  perrieri Studer; 
Laetmaster for Ctenaster spectabilis 
Perrier; Diplodontias for Goniodon 
Perrier; and Parasterina tor Pa- 
tiria crassa Gray. 


Sperry, W. L. Notes on Metacrinus. 
Fourth Report Mich. Acad. Sci., 
1904, pp. 195-199, 2 charts in 
text. 


Based on a 
dredged by the 


study of specimens 
United States Fish- 
eries steamer Albatross in Suruga 
Gulf, Honshu Island, Japan, 1900, 
and assigned to Dr. H. L. Clark, for 
study. Discusses the interrelations 
and variations in MW, rotundus and 
M. interruptus, 


WORMS, COELENTERATES, ETC. 


Rurus Maruer, jr. Foramini- 
fera collected near the Hawaiian 
Islands by the U. S. Bureau of Fish- 


eries steamer Albatross in 1902. 


,AGG, 


Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., xxx1v, No. 
1603, Apr. 28, 1908, pp. 
113-172, pl. v. 

The greater part of the bottom 


samples taken by the U. S. Bureau 


of Fisheries steamer Albatross near 
the Hawaiian Islands in 1902 was 
destroyed by fire; the remainder 
forms the basis of this report. 
There are enumerated 206° species, 
subspecies, and varieties belonging 


to 54 genera; of these 5 species and 
» subspecies are described as new. 
Busu. KATHERINE JEANNETTE. Tubicol- 
ous annelids of the tribes Sabellides 
and Serpulides from the Pacific 
Ocean. 
Expedition, 
167-346, 


Harriman Alaska 
XII, 1905, pp. 
XXI-XLIV. 

introduction gives a_ brief 

of Pacific annelids with a 

species previously recorded, 


pls. 


The 
account 
list of 


also lists of families, Known genera, | 


new genera, and species new to the 
region, which are represented in the 
Harriman collection. The 

matic discussion deals with 


syste- 


the 


Pusu, KATHERINE JEANNETTE—Cont’d. 
tribes Sabellides and Serpulides. 
Analytical tables for the genera are 
given, and 15 new genera and 45 
new species are described from the 
Pacific. The genus Spirorbis is ex- 
tensively dealt with, an annotated 
list of known species is given, and 
notes on many known species with 
descriptions of four new Atlantic 
forms. 

Based partly on material collected 
by the U. 8S. Fish Commission in the 


Atlantic. 
——— _ (See aJso; inder Jo Perey 
Moore. ) 
CLARK, Hupert LYMAN. -A new host 


for Myzostomes. 
Zool. Anz., Xxv, No. 682, Sept. 
29, 1902, pp. 670, 671. 

Notes the occurrence of Myzos- 
tomes on specimens of an ophiuran, 
Astroceras pergamena Lyman, col- 
lected by the U. S. Bureau of Fish- 
eries steamer Albatross off the coast 


of Japan in 1900, although these 
parasites have hitherto been found 


only on Crinoids. 

CLARKE, SAMUEL F. Reports on the 
scientific results of the expedition to 
the eastern tropical Pacific, in charge 
of Alexander Agassiz, by the U. 8. 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 133 


CLARKE, SAMUEL I*°.—Continued. SCHULZE. FRANZ EILHARD—Continued. 
Fish Commission steamer Albatross, Albatross, from October, 1904, to 
from October, 1904, to March, 1905, March, 1905, Lieut. Commander 1.. 
Lieut. Commander L. M. Garrett, M. Garrett, U. S. Navy, commanding. 
U. S. Navy, commanding. XI. Die Nenophyophoren. 

VIII. The Hvdroids. Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., 1, No. 
Memoirs Mus. Comp. Zool., Xxxv, 6, Nov., 1907, pp. 143-162. 

No. 1, Feb., 1907, pp. 1-18, _ _one plate. 
pls. 1-15. Reviews the discussion of the 
Only 12 species are noted, indi- | proper classification of Veusina 
cating a seareity of hydroid life in agassizi described by Goés 1892 as a 
iPabeatinnisanared@: Sik species are foraminifer and by Haeckel in 1889 
new, one from the unusual depth of as a horny sponge under the name 
2.845 fathoms. Two species were of Stannophyllum zonarium.  Con- 
previously known from the Atlantic siders it as belonging to a peculiar 


group of Rhizopods, which the author 
has called ‘* Xenophyophora’”’ ana 


side of the Isthmus. 


GOLDBERGER, JOSEPH. (See under C. which contains two families, eight 
W. Stiles.) genera, and 22 species. 


The Albatross 1904-5 collection 
vielded five species, which are de- 
Moorr, J. Percy, and Buscu (BusH), scribed; tables and a chart showing 

KATHERINE J. Sabellidae and Ser- DRUM rae EERE: ALOU BRS -7ElEO 

£ - ce ae wre = « « - » given. 

pulidae from Japan, with descrip- 

tions of new species of Spirorbis. 


HaASsSALL, A. (See under C. W. Stiles. ) 


Stites. C. W. The occurrence of a 


Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila. proliferating cestode larva (Spar- 
Jan., 1904 (issued March 18, | ganum  proliferum) in man in 
1904), pp. 157-179, pls. Florida. 

XT, NIT. Bull. 40, Hygienic Laboratory, 

Based on specimens collected by U. S. P. H. and M. H. S., 

the U.S. Bureau of Fisheries steamer | May, 1908, pp. 7-18, figs. 
Albatross in Japan, 1900. Fifteen | 1-18. 


species are noted, of which 13 are | 
described as new. Miss Bush con- | 
tributed descriptions of the Spiror- 


A re-examination of the type 
specimen of Filaria  restiformis 


bis, which are four in number. Leidy, at —— Agamomermis resti- 
Ransom, B. H. Notes on parasitic formis. 
See : ire ~ | Bull, 40, Hygienic Laboratory 
nematodes, including descriptions of | Oe ae oe 
: ye ee I U. S. P. H. and M. H. S., 
new genera and species, and ob- May, 1908, pp. 19-22, figs. 
servations on life histories. 19-26. 


Cire. 116, Bureau Animal Indus- 


: E —— The common tick (Dermacentor 
try, U. S. Dept. Agric., Oct. 4, | 


1907 _andersoni) of the Bitter Root Valley. 

Public Health Report, U. 8S. P. 

Occurrence of the cysticercus of H. and M. H. 8., xxii, No. 
Taenia solium in sheep. 27, July 3, 1908, p. 949. 

Science (n, s.), XXviI, No. 703, | —___ and GOLDBERGER, JOSEPH. Ob- 


June 19, 1908, pp. 950, 951. 
Only a few cases of the occurrence 
of the intermediate stage of the 


servations on two new parasitic 
trematode worms: Homalogaster 


armed tapeworm of man in sheep philippinesis n. sp., Agamodistomum 
have been reported, and the case nanus n. sp. 

cited in this article is the first Bull. 40, Hygienie Laboratory. 
American case to be placed on U. S. P. H. and H. M. S., May 
record. The specimens are in the 25, 1908, pp. 23-33, figs. 
helminthological collections of the °7_66. 


Bureau of Animal Industry. . : : 
; -————- -——— A re-examination of the 


original specimen of Taenia saginata 
abietina (Weinland, 1858). 


ScHULZE, FRANZ EILHARD. Reports on 
the scientific results of the expedi- 


tion to the eastern tropical Pacific, Bull. 40, Hygienic Laboratory. 
in charge of Alexander Agassiz, by U. S. P. H. and M. H. S., 


» 


the U. S. Fish Commission steamer May 25, 1908, pp. 35-38. 


154 


W.., In- 
dex-catalogue of medical and veteri- 
nary zoology. Subjects: Trematoda 
and trematode diseases. 
Bull. 37, Hygienic Laboratory, 
{mm yes) corms) o Asano (C0 Mea) Pana of at < 
June 1908, pp. 1-398. 
- VAUGHAN, T. WAYLAND. Recent Mad- 
* reporaria of the Hawaiian Islands 
and Laysan | by | T. Wayland Vaug- 


SiTiims, Ce and HASSALL, A. 


han Custodian of the Madrepo- 
rarian Corals, U. S. National Mu- 
seum Geologist, U. S. Geological 


Survey | [seal] | Washington | Goy- 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


VAUGHAN, T. WAYLAND—Continued. 
Bull. U. S. Nat. Mus., No. 59, 
July 12, 1907, pp. i-ix, 1-427, 
pls. I-xcvr. 

The writer presents some general 
considerations on the species prob- 
lem of corals, and the need of ex- 
perimental investigation and more 
elaborate studies of variation. Lists 
are given of the families and genera 
of Madreporaria, of the Hawaiian 
species, their geographic and bathy- 
metric distribution, and distribution 
according to temperature. In the 
systematic discussion of the fauna 
are described 79 new species, varie- 
ties, forms, and subforms. 


BOTANY. 


ernment Printing Office | 1907. 
ATWOOD, ALICE CARY. (For notice of 


catalogue of botanical library of 
John Donnell Smith, see under Bib- 
liography. ) 

Britton, N. L. and Ross, J. N. A 
preliminary treatment of the Opun- 
tioideae of North America. 

Smithsonian Misc. Colls., 1, 


Quar, issue, Pt. 4, No. 1786, 
Feb. 20, 1908, pp. 503-539. 


Pereskiopsis, a new genus of 
Cactaceae. 
Smithsonian Mise. Colls.,  b, 


No. 1775, 
SEWERhEy 


Quar. issue, Pt. 3, 

Oct. 28, 1907, pp. 
pls. XLIII—XLIV. 

CLARK, C. B. 
Rica. 


The Cyperaceae of Costa 


Contr. U. SN. 
6, January 24, 
i-vii, 443-471. 
Hircucock, A. S. 
grasses. 
Contr. U. 
3, June 18, 
113-158, i-v. 
A study of the American species 


Nat. Herod... x, Pt. 
1908, pp. 


Types of American 


S.. Nat. Herb., xt1, Pt. 
1908, pp. i-v, 


of grasses described by Linnaeus, 
Gronovius, Sloane, Swartz, and 
Michaux. 


JouNston, J. R. A collection of plants 
from the vicinity of La Guaira, Ven- 
ezuela, 

Contr. U. S. Nat. Herd., XI, 
Pt. 2, May 20, 1908, pp. i—vii, 
109-111. 

MANN, ALBerT. (Assisted in the bibli- 

ography and citations by P. L. Rick- 


er.) Report on the Diatoms of the 


MANN, ALBERT—Continued. 
Albatross voyages in 
Ocean, 1888-1904. 


Contr. U. S. Nat. Herbd., x, Pt. 
5, July 11, 1907, pp. i-viii, 
221-442, pls. XLIV—-LIV. 


the Pacifie 


MAXON, WILLIAM R. Studies of trop- 
ical American ferns, No. 1. 
Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb, x, Pt. 
7, Mar. 30, 1908, pp. i—viii, 
473-508, pls. LV-LVI. 
and UNDERWOOD, LUCIEN M. 
Two new ferns of the genus Lind- 
saea, 
Smithsonian Mise. Colls.,  b, 
Quar. issue, Pt. 8, No. 1776, 
Oct. 28, 1907, pp. 335, 336. 
PITTIER DE FABREGA, H, 


daceae of Costa Rica. 
Contr. U. S. Nat. Herd., Xt, 
Pt. 2, May 20,1908, pp. i-vii 
95-101, pls. I-vi1, figs. 1-4. 


The Lecythi- 


Tonduzia, a new genus of Apo- 
eynaceae from Central America, 
Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. x1 
Pt. 2, May 20, 1908, pp. i—vii 
103, 104, pl. Ix, figs. 5, 6. 


RICKER, FP. i. (See under Albert 


Mann.) 


Rosr, J. N. Nopalea guatemalensis, a 
new eactus from Guatemala. 

Mise. Colls., UL, 
Pt. 3, No. 4774, 

1907, p. 330, pls. 


Smithsonian 
Quar. issue, 
Oct. 28, 
XLI—XLII. 

(See also under N. L. Brit- 


ton.) 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 135 


SmirH, JoHN D., Catalogue of botan- | WicuTt, HE. F. A new larch from 
ical library of. (See under Bibliog- Alaska. 


raphy.) Smithsonian Mise. Colls.,  w, 


Quar. issue, Pt. 2, No. 1728, 
UNDERWOOD, LucIEN M. (See under 


William R. Maxon.) 


GEOLOGY AND 


BASSLER, Ray S. Cement and cement 
materials. 


Mineral Resources of Virginia, 
1907, pp. 86-167, pls. xI-xx. 
This paper deals with the general 
geology, geography, and stratigraphy 
of western Virginia, the economic 
value of the various cement horizons 
and distribution of cement materials. 
Details of localities, analyses, maps, 
and a number of illustrations accom- 
pany the report. 


Howe Li, Epwin E. (with Wirt Tas- 
sin). The Williamstown meteorite. 


Amer. Jour. Sci., 4th ser., xxv, 
No. 145, Jan., 1908, pp. 49, 50, 
1 fig. 

Mr. Howell gives the circumstances 
of the finding of the iron, its weight 
and general appearance, stating that 
it is a thin, flat, rectangular mass 
weighing about 31 kg., and was 
found in 1892, near Williamstown, 
Grant County, Ky. Mr. Tassin de- 
scribes the iron metallographically 
as a typical octahedrite of medium 
coarseness. Bands of kamacite, 
taenite, and plessite are visible on 
the etched surfaces, with occasional 
nodules of troilite, some of which 
contain - carbonaceous matter and 
are surrounded by a skin of schrei- 
bersite. His analysis is as follows: 

me, 91254). Nit 7.26.3 Co; 0:52):- Cu, 
OL0S 24 Er- 0:05) 2 10.12 87 O10 eC, 
0.004 ; Si, trace ; total, 99.694. 


— The Ainsworth meteorite. 


Am. Jour. Sci., 4th ser., xxv, 
No. 146, Feb., 1908, pp. 
105-107, figs. 1, 2. 

Mr. Howell gives the weight of 
the mass as 10.65 kg., with a den- 
sity of 7.85, and states that it was 
found in 1907 about 6 miles north- 
west of Ainsworth, Brown County, 
Nebr. Mr. Tassin describes’ the 
meteorite as being triangular in out- 
line and having a well-marked octa- 
hedral fracture on one edge; in fact, 
the three edges of the section stud 
ied approximate three directions of 
an octahedron, with the cut surface 
forming a fourth. In structure the 
iron is unique, the etched surface 


July 20, 190%, .p.. 174, pk 
XVI. 


MINERALOGY. 


Howe tri, Epwin E.—Continued. 
showing octahedral lamellae of the 
largest size, in which appear very 
minute areas which also possess a 
well-defined lamallar strueture and 
show the three characteristic alloys. 
Troilite occurs in irregularly shaped 
segregations, which contain more or 
less carbon, with grains of nickel, 
iron, and phosphide of iron, and asa 
whole surrounded by a thin skin of 
schreibersite. Rhabdite is abun- 
dantly present. The analysis gives : 

Fe, 92.22; Ni, 6.49; Co, 0.42; Cu, 
O01 P1028 -8.70.07 2 Cr OO. St 
0.049; C.-0.09; Sp. gr., 7.85. 


MERRILL, GEoRGE P. The meteor crater 
of Canyon Diablo, Ariz.; its history, 
origin, and associated meteoric irons. 

Smithsonian Mise. Colls., ts 
Quar. issue, Pt. 4, No. 1783. 

Jan. 27, 1908, pp. 461-498, 

pls. LXI-LXxvV, figs. 124-129. 

The character of the work is fully 
indicated by the title. The paper is 
the result of studies made on the 
crater under the auspices of the 
Smithsonian Institution in May, 1907. 


———and Tassin, Wirt. Contribu- 
tions to the study of the Canyon 
Diablo meteorites. 

Smithsonian Mise. Colls.,  , 
Quar. issue, Pt. 2, No. 1731, 
Sept. 12, 1907, pp. 203-215, 

pls. XVIII-XXI, figs. 48, 49. 
Doctor Merrill first discusses at 
length the “shale balls”? and iron 
shale distributed about the crater 
of Coon Butte, Ariz., from the view 
point of their bearing on its origin. 
The shale balls and iron shale are 
held to have been derived from the 
same mass. This iron shows. cer- 
tain differences from the typical 
iron of the Canyon Diablo meteor- 
ites. This difference is explained 
by the suggestion that the original 
meteoric mass was very heterogene- 
ous in character, with segregation 
masses rich in chlorides, phosphides, 
etc., which might easily have sepa- 
rated along their lines of contact 
from the more homogeneous portions 
and have from their very nature 


136 


Merritt, Greorce P.—Continued. 
undergone more extensive chemical 
decompositions. 
Mr. Tassin gives analyses of the 
shale-ball the oxidized  por- 
tions of such a ball, and compares 


irons. 


them with earlier analyses of the 
typical Canyon Diablo iron and of 


oxidized shale balls. Finding little 


or no ferrous oxide, he regards 
the shale as composed essentially 
of limonite with some turgite, 
and that its magnetic property 
is, in part at  Jeast, due to 
unaltered schreibersite visible in 
many sections. Analyses are also 


given of the mineral components of 
the iron-taenite, cohenite, schreiber- 
site in two varieties, a black non- 


magnetic residue, und olivine. 


REPORT GF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


TASSIN, Wirt. [Analysis of a new 
variety of sericite.|) The Granites 


of Maine (by T. Nelson Dale). 


Bull. U. 8. Geol.-Surv., No. 318, 
1907, pp. 46, 47. 

From a quartz vein at Boldwell 

Company's quarry, Cooks Mountain, 


Redbeach, Calais, Me. In _ fine 
seales when compacted resembles 
serpentine. Luster pearly. Color 
ereenish - yellow. Hardness, 2.5. 
Density, 2.79. Composition: SiO., 
53.28; AlsOs, 23.06; FesOs, 0.10; 


FeO, 4.30; MgO, 4.09; 
K.O, 8.90; H.0, 6.00. 


Na.O, 0.65 ; 


(See also under Edwin E. 
Howell and George I’. Merrill.) 


PALEONTOLOGY. 


ANDERSON, Roperr. (See under Ralph 


Arnold.) 
ARNOLD, RaLpu. Geology and oil re- 
sources of the Summerland district, 

Santa Barbara County, Cal. 
Bull. U. S. Geol. Surv., No. 


¢ 1907. pp. 1-93, 


figs. 1-35. 


321, 


pls. I-XVII, 


The characteristic fossils of the 
district are here illustrated to aid 
in the identification of the oil 
horizons.. A plate by Dr. R. 8. 
3assler, illustrating the bryozoa of 
the Fernando formation is included. 
The specimens illustrated are the 


property of the National Museum. 


of fossil mollusks from the oil- 


bearing Tertiary formetions of Santa 
Barbara County. Cal. 


Smithscnian Mise. Colls.,  b, 
Quar. issue, Pt. 4, No. 1781, 
Dee. 18. 1907, pp. 419-447, 


pls. L-LV111. 


Deseribes and figures the charac- 
teristic fossil mollusks from these 


formations. The are ali 
new, and the types with one excep- 
tion are the property of the Na- 
tional Museum. 


species 


ROBERT. 
the Santa 
Barbara 


— and ANDERSON. 
ogy and 
Maria oil 
County, Cal. 
Bull. U. S 
1907, pp. 
Illustrates the 


resources of 


Santa 


oil 
district, 


Geol. Surv., No. 322, 
1-161, pls. 1-Xxv!. 
characteristic fos- 
sils to aid in the determination of 
the horizon. The specimens’ illus- 
trated are the property of the Na- 
tional Museum. 


— New and characteristic species 


Geol- | 


ARNOLD, RALPH. (See also under 
George Homans Eldridge. ) 

BASSLER, Ray S. (See under E,. O. 
etch) 

ELDRIDGE, GEORGE HOMANS, and ARNOLD, 
RatPpH. The Santa Clara Valley, 


Puente Hills, and Los Angeles oil 


districts, Southern California. 
Bull. U. S. Geol. Surv., No. 309, 
1907, pp. 1-266, pls. I-xtl, 
figs. 1-17. 

Figures many Museum specimens 
from these districts to aid in the 
identification of the various forma- 
tions. 

GIDLEY, JAMES WILLIAMS. Revision 
of the Miocene and _ Pliocene 
HEquidae of North America, 

Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 


XXIfI, art. 85, Nov. 26, 1907; 


pp. 865-954. 
A revision of the genera and 
species, and «a rearrangement and 
reidentification of the subfamilies, 


or groups, of the Hquidae have here 
been made, and several new species 
are described. 

Wes 
Alaska in 
of Pleistocene 


Smithsonian 
1907 in 
verte- 


GILMORE, CHARLES 


explorations in 
search fossil 
brates. 
Smithsonian Misc. Colls., ut, No. 
1807, May 27, 1908, pp. 3-38, 
pls. I—xt1l, figs. 1-4. 
Deseribes the results of the second 
expedition sent to Alaska in search 
of fossil vertebrates under the 
auspices of the Smithsonian Insti- 
tution, followed by a brief review 
of the Pleistocene fauna of that 
region, 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


HaAtTcHER, JOHN Bett. The Ceratop- 
sia. Based on preliminary studies 
by Othniel C. Marsh, edited and com- 
pleted by Richard 8S. Lull. 


Monogr. U. S. Geol. Surv., XUix, 
1907, pp. i-xxx, 1-800, pls. 
I-LI, figs. 1-125. 

The following types and_ plesio- 
types from the collections of the 
National Museum are illustrated in 
this work: Ceratops  paucidens 
(Marsh), C. montanus Marsh, Dice- 
ratops hatcheri Lull, Triceratops al- 
ticornis (Marsh), 7. calcornis Marsh, 
T. elatus Marsh, T. galeus Marsh, T. 
obtusus Marsh, 7. prorsus Marsh, T. 
serratus Marsh, 7. sulcatus Marsh. 


HENDERSON, JuNIUS. New species of 
Cretaceous invertebrates from north- 


ern Colorado. 
Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XxXxIv, 
No. 1611, June 16, 1908, pp. 
259-264, pl. XIII. 

Describes and figures five new 
species of Cretaceous invertebrates. 
These types are the property of the 
National Museum. 


MITCHELL, EVELYN GROESBEEK. AN ap- 
parently new protoblattid family 
from the Lower Cretaceous. 

Smithsonian Mise. Colls., wit, 


Pie is Non L698; 
1908, pp. 85, 86, 


Quar. issue, 
May 27, 
fig. 25. 
Describes and figures a new genus 
and species of Cretaceous’ insect. 
The specimen is in the collections 
of the National Museum. 


PARKS, WILLIAM ARTHUR. 


Stromatoporoids, 
University of Toronto Studies, 
Geological Series, No. 5, 1908, 
pp. 175-240, pls. viI—xv. 
Monographs the Stromatoporoids 


Niagara 


137 


PARKS, WILLIAM ARTHUR—Continued. 
of the Niagaran group. The major- 
ity of the types are the property of 
the National Museum. 


RUEDEMANN, RUDOLPH. 
New York, Pt. 2. 
New York State Museum, Mem. 
x1, 1908, pp. 1-583, pls. 1-81, 
figs. 1-482. 
Many of the types covered by this 
monograph are the property of the 
National Museum. 


Graptolites of 


UrricH, E. O., and BASSLER, R. S. Re- 
port on the Cretaceous 


New Jersey. 


3rvozea_ of 


Geol. Surv. New Jersey, FPai., 
Iv, 1907, pp. 8138-856, pls. 
XX—XXVI. 


Describes and illustrates the bryo- 
zoan fauna of the Cretaceous (Vin- 
centown) marl, consisting of 55 spe- 
cies, 14 of which are new. The 
types are the property of the Na- 
tional Museum. 


WaLcoTT, CuHarLtes D. Nomenclature 
of some Cambrian Cordilleran forme- 
tions. 


Smithsonian Mise. Colls., L113, 
No. 1804, Apr. 18, 1908, 
pp. 1-12. 


Proposes names for the Cambrian 
formations of the House Range, 


Utah; Blacksmith Fork, Utah; and 
Mount Bosworth, British Columbia, 
sections. 


——— Cambrian trilobites. 

Smithsonian Mise. Colls., 

No. 1805, Apr. 25, 

pp. 18-52, pls. I-vt. 

Describes and illustrates a few of 
the more striking new _ trilobites 
occurring in the House Range, Utah: 
Mount Stephen, British Columbia ; 

and Liberty Canyon, Idaho, sections. 


Talis, 
1908, 


BIOGRAPHY. 


DALL, WILLIAM HEALEY. 
dreys. 


Henry Ven- 


Nautilus, XXI, No. 9; Jan., 190%, 
p. 107. 


An obituary notice of an old cor- 
respondent of the Smithsonian Insti- 
tution. 


MERRILL, GEORGE P. 
minger. 


Carl Ludwig Ro- 


Mise. 
issue, Pt. 


Smithsonian 
Quar. 


Colls., 
1, No. 


LIT, 
1796, 


The types are the property of the 
National Museum, 
MERRILL, Grorcr P.—Continued. 
May 1, 1908, pp. 79-82. fig. 
oe. 

Contains a .brief account of the 
life and work of the late State 
paleontologist of Michigan. 
Edward Travers Cox. 

Smithsonian Misc. Colls., ii, 
Quar. issue, Pt. 1, No. 1797, 


May 1, 1908, pp. 83. 84, fig. 
24, 


Contains a brief account of his 
life and work. Mr. Cox was at one 


time State geologist of Indiana. 


138 


REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1908. 


BIBLIOGRAPHY. 


Atwoop, ALICE CARY. 
botanical library of John Donnell 
Smith presented in 1905 to the 
Smithsonian Institution. 

Contr. U. 8. Nat. Herb., Xtt, 
Pt. 1, Apr. 28, 1908, pp. i-iii, 
1-94. 

Brockett, PAuL. Bibliography of pub- 

lished works of S. P. Langley, Secre- 


Catalogue of the 


O 


Brockett, PAaut—Continued. 
tary of the Smithsonian Institution 
1SS7-1906. 
Smithsonian Mise. Colls. No. 
1720, Aug. 1, 1907, pp. 35-49. 
Printed in the account of the 


memorial meeting held on December 
3, 1906. 


_ en A ih ee a! yy Ieee : _ 
Fe ee wr | om